He has authored several cookbooks, including the attendant to the PBS series, Made in Spain: Spanish Dishes for the American Kitchen and Tapas: A Taste of and more »
Sioux Falls Argus Leader - Sep 09, 2010
She teaches Outlandish Language in Elementary Schools (FLES) classes, daily 15-minute Spanish lessons for students in standard classes, and more »
AnnArbor.com - Sep 09, 2010
Bread & Drink calendar for Ann Arbor areaThis 25th annual September celebration of the foods of Spain culminates with a two grill Paella throwdown on Zingerman's Patio. www.zingermansdeli.com. and more »
Boston Globe - Sep 06, 2010
The Beaulieus taught time languages in the Tiverton school system for more than three decades. Although retired, they were each teaching one Spanish class and more »
Seattle Times - Sep 08, 2010
Schleck, O'Grady sent proficient in from Spanish Vuelta: Andy Schleck, a two-time Tour de France runner-up, and Saxo Bank teammate Stuart O'Grady were sent peaceful from and more »
Ottawa Citizen - Sep 09, 2010
In the eighth century, Muslim armies began their assault of the Iberian peninsula, eventually taking the Spanish city of Cordoba. and more »
MiamiHerald.com - Aug 31, 2010
They swot El Mio Cid, Spain's oldest epic poem, in Spanish. They analyze mystery literature written by Frenchman Georges Simenon in and more »
Martinsville Bulletin - Sep 06, 2010
While in college, she feigned abroad in Spain. “Spanish was always my favorite subject in school. It came natural for me,” Mittelman said. and more »
Gothamist - Sep 08, 2010
Bloomberg, Jolie, Father's Daughter Bash Koran-Burning1) Building a community center in New York = Muslim victory of the Maghrib and Spain. 2) Crusades and Spanish ethnic cleansing in 1492 = unworthy of and more »
Ford Focus Tail Light, Ford tuning and Ford Focus Headlights
Failure Highlights Woes Facing Spanish Banking New York Times (blog)
04.06.10
Many of Spain’s savings banks, known as cajas, were at first pawnshops started by Catholic charities. The clergy gradually ceded put down of most cajas to regional politicians, who were eager to use them to finance city projects. But the priests of Córdoba fought inscrutable to maintain banking powers they had held since 1864, even after a merger with a secular adjoining competitor that created the current CajaSur entity 15 years ago.
While CajaSur may have been an anomaly in that account, it was all too typical of what has gone wrong with the cajas, which control about half the banking assets in Spain. Townswoman political parties in Córdoba accumulated loans from the bank totaling 87 million euros, or $106 million, over the gone five years.
More recently, with CajaSur maintaining its generosity toward borrowers while the construction sector plummeted, “it was to all intents difficult to tell the bank to stop lending when your own party was relying on its loans,” said Luis Martín Luna, a center-healthy politician who is also a former CajaSur director.
does anyone know any registered companys that do spanish language schools in spain ?
Jun 15, 2009 by hanas_emails | Posted in Studying Abroad
the only ones i can find are in latin america ???
any assistance !
isla have words schools in salamanca and barcelona, ive been to the one in salamanca and it was amazing, so fun, the city is beautiful and the lessons were really good.also they can organise for you to foil with host families or you can stay in a hotel. :)
lolly | Jun 15, 2009
isla have patois schools in salamanca and barcelona, ive been to the one in salamanca and it was amazing, so fun, the city is beautiful and the lessons were really good.also they can organise for you to halt with host families or you can stay in a hotel. :)
lolly | Jun 15, 2009
Is there any good and cheap Spanish language school in Spain?
Jun 22, 2006 by Sanchai K | Posted in Other - Education
Hola! I survive in Spain, and have been for the last 12 years.
I would suggest you go to a local private teacher, someone from the area you are living in. I teach Spanish to the ex-pat community in Granada.
I insinuate this, as a lot of the larger language schools (and language tapes and videos) tend to teach "perfect Spanish", which is not neccessarily the patois they understand in your area. I found I had this problem when I frist arrived here.
The best way I found of learning most (although I did go to a private tutor) was being near Spanish people and relating with them. It is very scabrous at first, but you eventually find you are understanding more without realising it. Also, I suggest you watch Spanish telly, relating the pictures with words helps.
Sufficient luck!
Krissyinthesun | Jun 22, 2006
Can anyone think of reasons why spain should stick to spanish traditions?
Mar 18, 2009 by LadyBaBa | Posted in Other - Cultures & Groups
This is for a activity at school
Should spain prevent the traditions from being lost, specifically with things like dance where newer forms such as reggaeton are becoming lay?