Bloecker

If you could have something named after you, what would it be? The Wood Workers in Holstein in North Germany were the Blockers, blocking wood. Ein Holzblock. Die Holzbloecke. Auch gut als Unterlage, einem Gefangen den Kopf abzuschlagen. Mit einem Schwert. Was als ehrenvoll galt bei public Executions. Die Kriminellen wurden in der Regel aufgehaengt, wobei die Raben dann die Toten frassen, bzw deren Leichnam. Die Seele war ja in der Hoelle, so die Kirche. The forests all over the globe have been cut down either to harvest the timber or wood, or burning to cook and heat the homes or more. Logging was the word to ship the red cedar trees in Australia along the rivers by steam boats and then via larger Steamers across the ocean to Sydney and Melbourne. One tree was enough wood to build one house. Red Gold - Red Cedar Trees. Nothing left, indeed, but a few National Parks. Look at the USA, look at the Forests in South America. Humboldt went there and was blown away. His brother in Berlin was a linguist like Chomsky. Credit phb | Red Cedar Tree

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LOTE

Languages Other Than English Here is the English translation of the statement: Is learning a foreign languages superfluous thanks to good translation tools and AI? No! 30 March 2026 Dear colleagues, Recently I have been receiving press enquiries with increasing frequency suggesting that technological advances have made learning foreign languages unnecessary. The question posed is to what extent pupils' motivation to learn a foreign language is diminished by ever-improving translation tools — or whether, on the other hand, these tools might actually be what sparks interest in foreign languages in the first place. My usual response is that this topic matters deeply to us as a philologists' association, because it ultimately touches on our fundamental humanistic understanding of education. For Wilhelm von Humboldt, for example, learning foreign languages was vitally important because he saw it as a way of getting to know other cultures, and thereby advancing the individual's formative engagement with both themselves and the world. Through language learning — in his day, especially the classical languages — he wanted to enable the individual to "connect as much of the world as possible as closely as possible to themselves." A beautiful idea, and one that captures the humanistic approach to language learning. Foreign language learning is therefore about far more than translation. That is precisely why it remains irreplaceable as part of school education, regardless of how excellent translation tools…

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Apples

The Granite Belt: apple country at the edge of the subtropics The Granite Belt is Queensland's only four-season landscape — an 800-to-1,000-metre plateau of ancient granite, apple orchards, and Italian-German settler memory, three hours west of the Gold Coast yet climatically closer to Normandy than to Brisbane. For a fictional East German woman arriving by motorcycle from the subtropical coast, the region offers an uncanny mirror: Gravenstein apples descended from Danish-German stock, a town whose apple-growing heartland was once named Roessler after a German family (renamed in 1915 amid wartime hostility), and a landscape of frost-bitten orchards and balancing granite boulders that feels nothing like Australia and everything like involuntary memory. What follows is a comprehensive research dossier organized to support authentic Sebaldian scene-writing. The tin miners who became orchardists The Granite Belt's agricultural story begins not with apples but with tin. In 1872, the Pioneer Tin Mining Company triggered a rush to what was then called Quart Pot Creek amiens-qld-history Wikipedia — renamed Stanthorpe that year Wikipedia Queensland Places by Surveyor General Augustus Charles Gregory, from the Latin stannum (tin) and Middle English thorpe (village). Wikipedia +4 Cobb & Co coaches ran twice daily from Warwick. slq Thirty hotels did roaring trade. Chinese miners arrived via ship and rail in such numbers that by 1877 the local press reported "two hundred Chinamen going up the line." Tin valued at £2.5…

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