| Fruity Spanish! |
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Miércoles 21 de Septiembre de 2011 06:00
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Una manzana means an apple, but also a block of houses, ie una manzana de pisos. As a result the nickname for Nueva York is La Gran Manzana which precedes the English usage, the Big Apple. Una manzana de la discordia is a bone of contention. Un plátano is a banana, as well as a slang word for the male organ. Naranja, orange, is also used idiomatically. ¡Naranjas de la China! means No way!; encontrar su media naranja is to meet one’s match; esperar la media naranja, to wait for Mr Right/one’s ideal woman; mi media naranja is one’s better half. The above is an excerpt from a longer article on another website. To read more, click Fruity language. © Paul Whitelock Tags: spanish, manzana, apple, platano, banana, naranja, orange, pera, pear, melom, limon, lemon, lima, lime, uva, grape, mango, mandarina, tomate, tomato, fruity language, paul whitelock,
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, www.a1-solutions-spain.com
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Paul Whitelock
Paul es titulado en Español y Alemán (BSc) de la Universidad de Salford en Mánchester, Inglaterra. También tiene un Postgraduate Certificate of Education (Formación de Profesorado) y un título del Institute of Linguists (MIL).

Spanish is a very imaginative, colourful and at times earthy language. By way of example, let’s have a closer look at the Spanish for the common fruits, idiomatic phrases containing fruit words and some alternative meanings.