| DO'Neil User_talk:DO'Neil
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| Chilango Royal Spanish Academy and the Mexican Academy of Language agree on the definition of the word as referring to something "belonging to Mexico City", in particular referring to people native to the capital.Chilango is a Mexican slang demonym for a person from or living in Mexico City or its surrounding areas. It may have a negative connotation when used by someone in one of the 31 States of Mexico. Chilango
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| List of Tagalog loanwords Tagalog language, due to huge communication with outsiders and foreigners, has developed a unique vocabulary, using words from its own and other Austronesian roots and also from other foreign languages. According to the linguistic expert Jose Villa Panganiban, "of the 30,000 root words in the Tagalog language, there are close to 5,000 from Spanish, 3,200 from Malay, 1,500 from both Min Nan and Yueh Chinese dialects, 1,500 from English, 300 from Sanskrit, 200 from Arabic, and a few hundred altogether from Mexican, Persian, Japanese, and other languages". List_of_Tagalog_loanwords
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| José Fernando Ramírez José Fernando Ramírez (May 5, 1804 March 4, 1871) was a distinguished Mexican historian in the 19th century.Ramírez was born in Parral, Chihuahua but grew up in Durango, where he became a prominent liberal politician. After graduating with a degree in law from San Luis Gonzaga he was elected several times to the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. He chaired the Ministry of Foreign affairs under three different administrations and became a minister in the Supreme Court of Justice. José_Fernando_Ramírez
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| Dead external links/404/a Wikipedia:Dead_external_links/404/a
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| Dead external links/404/e Wikipedia:Dead_external_links/404/e
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| Dead external links/404/f Wikipedia:Dead_external_links/404/f
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| Dead external links/404/j Wikipedia:Dead_external_links/404/j
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| Dead external links/404/s Wikipedia:Dead_external_links/404/s
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| Edmundo O'Gorman Edmundo O'Gorman O'Gorman (* November 24 1906 in Mexico City September 28 1995 in Mexico City) was a Mexican writer, historian and philosopher.He was the brother of architect Juan O'Gorman and the son of painter and mining engineer Cecil Crawford O'Gorman who arrived in Mexico from Ireland in 1895. Edmundo_O'Gorman
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| Justo Sierra Justo Sierra Méndez (Campeche, México, January 26, 1848 - Madrid, Spain, September 13, 1912), was a prominent Mexican writer, journalist, poet and political figure of the second half of the nineteenth century. He was the son of Mexican novelist Justo Sierra O'Reilly, who is credited with inspiring his son with the spirit of literature. Justo_Sierra
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| Antonio Alatorre Antonio Alatorre (Born 1922 in Autlán, Jalisco) is a Mexican writer and academic. Antonio_Alatorre
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| Sergio Pitol Sergio Pitol Demeneghi (b. 18 March 1933 in Puebla) is a prominent Mexican writer and diplomat. In 2005 he received the Cervantes Prize, the most prestigious literary award in the Spanish-speaking world.Pitol studied law and literature and served in the Mexican foreign service at Rome, Belgrade, Warsaw, Paris, Beijing, Moscow, Budapest and Barcelona. He started publishing novels and poetry in the late 1960s. Sergio_Pitol
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| Francisco de Icaza Francisco Asís de Icaza (Mexico City, 2 February 1863 - Madrid, 28 May 1925) was a Mexican poet, literary critic and historian of literature who spent most of his adult career in Spain.In his twenties he was posted to the Mexican legation in Madrid, during the embassy of his friend Vicente Riva Palacio; he became ambassador to Germany and to Spain; known at first for his poems, he achieved some notoriety with his Examen de críticos (1894). Francisco_de_Icaza
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| Pederasty/Archive 2 Talk:Pederasty/Archive_2
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| Academia Mexicana de la Lengua Academia Mexicana de la Lengua (variously translated as the Mexican Academy of Language, the Mexican Academy of the Language, the Mexican Academy of Letters, or glossed as the Mexican Academy of the Spanish Language; acronym AML) is the correspondent academy in Mexico of the Royal Spanish Academy. Academia_Mexicana_de_la_Lengua
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| 1835 in Mexico 1835 in Mexico: 1835_in_Mexico
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