March 24, 2008

   
LOGIN | SUBSCRIBE | GUIDEBOOKS | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US |
| Home
| Top Story
| Business & Real Estate
| Arts, Travel & Fishing >
| The Nica Times
| Daily News
| Letters to the Editor
| Photo Galleries >
| Classified Ads >
| Exchange Rates
Central Bank
Reference Rate

BUY ¢492.37 SELL ¢498.22

Passion abounding: Mary consoles Jesus during a three-hour Procession of the Passion Friday at San Joaquín de Heredia, north of San José . It is one of Costa Rica 's most visited re-enactments of the events prior to and after the Crucifixion.

Harmony Reforma | Tico Times

| Previous Daily News
| Monday | Tuesday
| Wednesday | Thursday
| Friday

In search of a croc: Lagarteros participated Friday in the Lagarteada , a festival in Santa Cruz, in Costa Rica's northwestern Guanacaste province, which involves hundreds of revelers, plenty of alcohol, and a search for a crocodile that is dragged into town and left there, only to be returned to the river, unharmed, the next day. The “croc hunt” went on despite warnings by the Environment Ministry, which called the custom an act of cruelty to animals.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Costa Rica seizes FARC money from Heredia couple
Information gathered from slain Colombian rebel leader Raúl Reyes' computer led police to a home in Costa Rica last week where they found a safe with $480,000 believed to belong to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
See More...
Costa Rica phone numbers grow to eight digits
While many Costa Rican residents were out of town for a Semana Santa (Easter Holy Week) vacation, their phones were busy growing another digit.
See More...
Fatalities up during Easter holiday week
Dozens of serious accidents occurred in Costa Rica as residents took to the coast en mass during the Easter holiday break.
April means arts in Costa Rica
Spanish singer Rosario Flores and Argentine group El Choque Urbano are set to perform in Costa Rica as part of the 11th International Arts Festival (FIA), taking place in multiple venues in San José, Alajuela and Puntarenas from April 11 to 20.

Beware of Treacherous
False Friends

We call them “false friends.” No, they are not those friendly Costa Ricans who so happily give you all the wrong directions when you are trying to find a place. They are words that look and sound like words in English, but mean something quite different in another language. They are words that can make you say the wrong thing and even make you look silly. Try complaining about the preservativos in processed food, and you'll see what I mean.

 

Costa Rica seizes FARC money from Heredia couple

Information gathered from slain Colombian rebel leader Raúl Reyes' computer led police to a home in Costa Rica last week where they found a safe with $480,000 believed to belong to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

No arrests were made during the raid on the house in Heredia, just north of San José , and no charges were pending against the couple who resided there, the Associated Press reported.

Francisco Gutiérrez, a university professor who heads an international doctoral program, and his wife Cruz Prado, also an academic and former union activist, agreed to store the safe in 1997, telling reporters last Tuesday that Reyes and another FARC leader, Rodrigo Granda, had visited their home using false names and posing as negotiators for peace in the Colombian conflict, according to AP. The couple said they were led to believe the Colombians were in Costa Rica to speak to representatives of the U.S. State Department.

The couple insisted they had no idea the safe contained $480,000 until authorities seized the money on March 14, and Prado said she believed it only contained documents.

“They (Reyes and Granda) stayed with us several days,” Prado said, according to AP. “Later, he (Reyes) asked us if a third person could leave something at our house and we said yes.”

She was also shocked, she said, upon the discovery of her guests' real identity in 2004. “We were very scared to see who we had been dealing with, but this (box) wasn't ours and we couldn't get rid of it, so we didn't tell anyone,” AP quoted her saying.

The raid occurred as Colombia has been working with Interpol to uncover ties between the country's 40-year-old rebel group and other nations.

The tip-off on the cash in Costa Rica came from an e-mail correspondence allegedly between Granda, FARC's international relations man believed to be living in Cuba , and Reyes, the guerrilla group's No. 2 in command who was killed along with at least 20 of his soldiers on March 1 when Colombian troops attacked a rebel camp just inside Ecuadorean territory, sparking a regional crisis. Colombia 's military came into possession of three FARC computers found at the camp.

-Tico Times

Costa Rica phone numbers grow to eight digits

While many Costa Rican residents were out of town for a Semana Santa (Easter Holy Week) vacation, their phones were busy growing another digit.

Now eight-digits long, landline numbers begin with an extra “2” and cell phones (which previously began with “3” or “8”) start with an added “8.”

After announcing the addition about a year ago, the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) made the change on March 20.

This is the second time in 14 years that ICE, which has the country's telecom monopoly, added on a digit. The last time was in 1994, when phone numbers went from six to seven digits.

There are an estimated 3 million phone lines in Costa Rica , including cell phones.

However, three-digit numbers such as 911 and numbers starting with 800 or 900 remain as they were.

-Tico Times

Fatalities up during Easter holiday week

Dozens of serious accidents occurred in Costa Rica as residents took to the coast en mass during the Easter holiday break.

The number of fatalities reached 34 as of yesterday morning, according to Nacion.com.

The total – which includes two murders and two drownings over the weekend – rose from the 28 reported Saturday by Red Cross.

Red Cross only reports “on site” deaths. As further accident victims could pass away in the hospital and more fatalities might have occurred during yesterday's journeys home from the holidays (after this article was written), the final count after Easter Holy Week, or Semana Santa , will likely rise further still. Red Cross reported sending a total of 78 people in serious condition to hospitals.

As of the Saturday report, Red Cross workers had rescued 49 people in seaside and mountain areas, and on highways and roads.

Costa Rican Red Cross President Miguel Carmona called for greater “caution and respect for the law.”

This year's Red Cross death count was not far from last year's 31 or from the 27 deaths recorded in 2006.

-Tico Times and ACAN/EFE

April means arts in Costa Rica

By Rob Bartlett
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

Spanish singer Rosario Flores and Argentine group El Choque Urbano are set to perform in Costa Rica as part of the 11th International Arts Festival (FIA), taking place in multiple venues in San José, Alajuela and Puntarenas from April 11 to 20.

Alongside other events, the festival will see a “Boulevard of the Arts” created in San José 's La Sabana Park. This “Festival within the festival” will be a focal point for the week's activities.

“I am convinced that the more we evolve as a society, the more our arts will develop, and vice-versa,” said President Oscar Arias, who attended the March 13 press conference for the presentation of next month's FIA program.

The festival sets out to showcase the best of Costa Rican theater, poetry, music and visual arts alongside 70 international artists and performers from 20 countries around the world.

In a controversial move, FIA has chosen China as its specially invited guest country. “President Arias personally invited China ,” Aurelia Garrido, vice minister for culture, told The Tico Times. “Cultural exchange is a way to encourage dialogue and to get to know each other better.”

Beware of Treacherous False Friends

We call them “false friends.” No, they are not those friendly Costa Ricans who so happily give you all the wrong directions when you are trying to find a place. They are words that look and sound like words in English, but mean something quite different in another language. They are words that can make you say the wrong thing and even make you look silly. Try complaining about the preservativos in processed food, and you'll see what I mean.

Like the subjunctive and irregular verbs, we must deal with their reality, no matter how much we want to argue with them, no matter how perverse they may seem.

Let's take a look at a sampling of these contrary critters in Costa Rican Spanish:

A preservativo is a condom, also known as a condón. If you want to talk about food preservatives, you have to say preservante.

If you want to discuss current events, you do not want to use the word corriente, which means “common” or “ordinary.” To make matters worse, the word for “current” (in the sense of time, not water), actual, is another false friend. So if you want to say “actual,” you'd best use verdadero. And since actualmente means “currently,” if you want to say “actually,” you must use an expression such as de veras, en realidad, de verdad or verdaderamente.

Decepcionar means “to disappoint,” and, by the same token, a decepción is a “disappointment.” If you want to say “to deceive,” it's engañar, while “deceit” and “deception” are engaño, and “deceitful” is engañoso.

If you are excited about something, it is not a good idea to say that you are excitado or excitada, which carries the sexual connotation of “aroused.” You are, instead, emocionado or emocionada. Likewise, don't describe last night's dance as excitante (unless it was), when what you really mean is emocionante.

Be careful about getting into a discusión. It's an argument, in the sense of a fight.

Familiar is connected with the meaning of “family.” A better word for something “familiar” is conocido.

Rentar means “to yield a profit.” Similarly, the most common meaning of rentable is “profitable.” “To rent” is alquilar, and, strangely, el alquiler is “the rent.”

Vicioso means “depraved” or “full of vices.” A vicious dog is a perro bravo.

Afección refers to a disease or some other sort of medical condition. The word for “affection” is cariño.

Don't go thinking your friend's 14-year-old is a genius because he goes to el colegio. In Costa Rica, a colegio is usually a high school, although once in a while it is used as a general term for “school.” “College” in Spanish is la universidad, whether it contains a graduate school or not.

Even the names of the high school grades are confusing. With the exception of some special programs, students graduate after completing 11th grade, but since they have an extra grade at the elementary level, they complete just as many grades. Usually, however, everybody starts counting again when students come out of sixth grade and begin el colegio. Thus, seventh grade is primero, eighth grade is segundo, ninth grade is tercero, 10th grade is cuarto and 11th grade is quinto.

High school and college degrees are called títulos (a word that is another can of worms). At the end of their last year of high school, Costa Ricans take a test to obtain their bachillerato degree. We traditionally translate this word as “baccalaureate,” rather than “bachelor.” A four- or five-year college degree is a licenciatura, and the recipient of this degree is a licenciado or licenciada.

If you tell a Spanish speaker that Texas is largo, he will think it looks like Chile. Largo means “long” in English. “Large” is grande.

Be careful with this one! While in English a violator may simply be someone who drives too fast, in Spanish a violador is a rapist. Violar means “to rape.”

And don't go thinking that if your Tico friend comments on how sano you are, he is surprised you are not crazy. Sano means “healthy.” “Sane” is cuerdo or sensato.

If you are sensible, you are not “sensible”; you are “sensitive.” If you tell someone he is sensitivo, you will be telling him, to his great confusion, that he is capable of using his five senses. “Sensible” may be sensato, cuerdo, razonable or de buen sentido.

“Library” in Spanish is biblioteca. A librería is technically a “bookstore,” which seems to be neither here nor there in Costa Rica, where librerías typically sell school supplies.

Someone who asks for your firma is not trying to take over your business. He only wants your signature. A “business firm” is an empresa, compañía or casa comercial.

If somebody wants to know if you asiste a clases, he's not asking if you are teacher's little helper. Asistir (a) in Spanish means “to attend.” “To assist” is ayudar.

Éxito means “success.” An “exit” in Spanish is a salida. To add insult to injury, the word suceso means “event.”

You had better not go around telling people you are embarazado or embarazada, unless you are pregnant. What you can say if you're embarrassed is “Estoy avergonzado” or “Tengo vergüenza.”

These are, as I said, only a sampling of false friends. But hey, did you know that there are fickle friends as well as false friends?

Stay tuned.

kategalante@yahoo.com

Costa Rica dentist, health, teeth whitening, crowns, dental implants, bleaching, crowns, permanent make-up
Tico Times, Costa Rica, travel guide, guidebook, beaches, rainforests, hotels, activities, restaurants
Costa Rica gated community, Costa Rican real estate, Santa Ana, living in Costa Rica, moving to Costa Rica
   
RETURN TO THE TOP OF PAGE

HOME | SUBSCRIBE | ADVERTISE | GUIDEBOOKS | BACK ISSUES | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US | ABOUT US | NEWSSTANDS | LINKS