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View Full Version : Notes in Spanish Intermediate 42 - La Mafia


Ben
30th January 2008, 04:34 PM
Listen and pick up the worksheets here. (http://www.notesinspanish.com/2008/01/30/intermediate-spanish-podcast-42-la-mafia/)

We look at the extraordinary range of mafias in Europe and discover just how many there are, and what they are up to, in Spain.

Coming up in the next 4 shows… Life without TV, An Impossible National Anthem, Travel in Spain, and The New Immigration!

Get the worksheet pack today and hear them now!

If you buy the latest worksheet pack to go with this and the next 4 shows (Intermediate 42 to 46) before all the audio has been released (i.e. before the beginning of March 2008), you can access all those shows right now!

Get the worksheet pack here (http://www.notesinspanish.com/store/index.php?act=viewProd&productId=111) and see the ‘Read Me’ file inside for details.

Ben
30th January 2008, 07:28 PM
P.S. I picked up the coolest word I've learned for ages when we made this podcast:

Sicario .... doesn't that word sound soooo mean?

(Oh and what does it mean?)

guapo
30th January 2008, 08:46 PM
P.S. I picked up the coolest word I've learned for ages when we made this podcast:

Sicario .... doesn't that word sound soooo mean?

(Oh and what does it mean?)

well it has the same meaning in Italian as in Spanish, so you can use it in all sorts of places.... just be careful :eek:

gianluca7883
30th January 2008, 10:36 PM
P.S. I picked up the coolest word I've learned for ages when we made this podcast:

Sicario .... doesn't that word sound soooo mean?

(Oh and what does it mean?)

jejeje Yes, we use the word sicario in Italian, too... it's just a person paid to kill somebody or simply a killer :) this word has a Latin origin, as a matter of fact "sica" was a knife or a dagger used by Roman mercenaries :)

ese
30th January 2008, 11:00 PM
Hasta hace poco los únicos sicarios que existían en España eran de nacionalidad colombiana, pero en los últimos años han venido mucho de los países del este de Europa.

En zonas de la Costa del Sol como Marbella, Mijas, Benalmádena, Fuengirola, Torremolinos, etcétera, se esconden muchas de estas mafias. Como en estas zonas viven mucho inmigrantes europeos, pasan desapercibidos. Luego, se desplazan a cualquier lugar de España a atracar bancos o casas, y no dudan en utilizar la violencia.

Y si no miren lo que le pasó a José Luis Moreno:
http://libertaddigital.com:6681/noticias/noticia_1276320006.html

Marina
13th June 2008, 11:30 AM
Más información en este artículo de el mundo.es (http://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2008/06/13/espana/1213336244.html)

betty.ike
19th February 2009, 01:33 AM
jejeje Yes, we use the word sicario in Italian, too... it's just a person paid to kill somebody or simply a killer :) this word has a Latin origin, as a matter of fact "sica" was a knife or a dagger used by Roman mercenaries :)

I wonder if that is where the term "Sic 'em" comes from - something you say to a dog when you want it to attack someone or something. (not that I ever use that phrase for my dogs).

I found this podcast very interesting. So interesting that I downloaded all of the podcasts.
Y ahora, estoy practicando mi español.

Claro que uno de mis series favoritas es "The Sopranos".

gastephen
19th February 2009, 06:34 PM
I wonder if that is where the term "Sic 'em" comes from - something you say to a dog when you want it to attack someone or something. (not that I ever use that phrase for my dogs).

I found this podcast very interesting. So interesting that I downloaded all of the podcasts.
Y ahora, estoy practicando mi español.

Claro que uno de mis series favoritas es "The Sopranos".

«Mr. Tamony gave an etymological insight by adding that sic 'em is "merely a pronunciation modification of seek 'em or seek 'im."»

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE7DF1131F930A25755C0A9659582 60&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=1

Cristóbal Noble
5th September 2009, 03:45 PM
La mafia. ¿Hay una diferencia entre mafia y hampa? Cristóbal