Monthly Folding Challenge - May 2008
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- Finward
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Monthly Folding Challenge - May 2008
"Life in Oceania"
Fold an endemic specie from that continent, plant or animal, from the Great Sandy Desert to the lost Islands of Polynesia, crossing the Great barrier Reef, and sooo many other islands. From water, sand or rainforest.
You already know the rules:
- Preferably no cuts gluing or painting.
- If you create it, should be an unpublished model.
These are the templates i would give for the rules, but Daydreamer has the last word as he is the judge.
Have a nice folding!!!
Fold an endemic specie from that continent, plant or animal, from the Great Sandy Desert to the lost Islands of Polynesia, crossing the Great barrier Reef, and sooo many other islands. From water, sand or rainforest.
You already know the rules:
- Preferably no cuts gluing or painting.
- If you create it, should be an unpublished model.
These are the templates i would give for the rules, but Daydreamer has the last word as he is the judge.
Have a nice folding!!!
Sebastian Arellano
https://www.facebook.com/OrigamiDesdeLerma
https://www.facebook.com/OrigamiDesdeLerma
- Jonnycakes
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Good idea for a contest! Lots of possibilities. I did a quick search and found a neat site about New Zealand wildlife: http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~janm/wildl ... #Albatross. Perhaps this will spark some ideas.
- Ondrej.Cibulka
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I hope I prepare something from Oceania, but at first that biplane... Maybe biplane should be scientific craft to study Oceania... isn't it?
Ondrej Cibulka Origami, www.origamido.cz
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Sorry, dragon man. That's a myth. I quote from this page: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/kangaroodragon man wrote:When the British (us) went to Australia they went up to the natives pointed at a kangaroo and asked it's name the native replyed "kangaroo"so thats what they called it however kangaroo translated means "I dunno"
Word History: A widely held belief has it that the word kangaroo comes from an Australian Aboriginal word meaning "I don't know." This is in fact untrue. The word was first recorded in 1770 by Captain James Cook, when he landed to make repairs along the northeast coast of Australia. In 1820, one Captain Phillip K. King recorded a different word for the animal, written "mee-nuah." As a result, it was assumed that Captain Cook had been mistaken, and the myth grew up that what he had heard was a word meaning "I don't know" (presumably as the answer to a question in English that had not been understood). Recent linguistic fieldwork, however, has confirmed the existence of a word gangurru in the northeast Aboriginal language of Guugu Yimidhirr, referring to a species of kangaroo. What Captain King heard may have been their word minha, meaning "edible animal."
Yes, I am that Joseph Wu. Not that it really matters. And please call me Joseph or Joe. "Mr. Wu" is my dad.
- Ondrej.Cibulka
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- dragon man
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- Ondrej.Cibulka
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It is also more logic (straightaway). Why would be native to say "I do not know" if he do not know English?
Ondrej Cibulka Origami, www.origamido.cz
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- Ondrej.Cibulka
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Maybe he was native philosopher and said "I do not know who I am?"
Ondrej Cibulka Origami, www.origamido.cz
- InsomniacFolder
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My friend, Nalong Conway of the Nunga in South Australia, confirms that the trans-literated sounds "Kanga - Roo" can be loosely interpreted as "I don't know."Joseph Wu wrote: Sorry, dragon man. That's a myth. I quote from this page [...]
The story about Captain Cook is pretty certainly apocryphal though.