Working on a Speech
On Tuesday I have to give a presentation in Italian with the subject my own choice. I am pretty sure I am going to talk about Lucca, the city where I will be going in September.
Ok, this is what I want to include:
- Lucca is a city west of Florence in Tuscany. It is a city with medieval walls still intact. The walls have eleven gates. Visitors and the people of Lucca walk along the tops of the walls. Each section of the wall has different trees planted for the enjoyment of the walkers
- In the walled cental part of the city, very few cars are allowed. The people walk or ride bicycles.There is much to see in Lucca. It is the birthplace of Puccini and there is a museum I want to visit {I have also found references to textile museums which sound interesting–more research needed.}
- Talk briefly about Tuscan food and especially about the specialities of Lucca.{Tortelli lucchese and ?
- The city is called the city of 100 churches and I look forward to seeing as many of many of them as I can because I like churches. In the Cathedral of St. Martin, there is a crucifix called the Volto Santo which means Holy Face– which was supposed to be carved by Nicodemus and is also supposed to be a true likeness of Jesus. {I need to flesh this paragraph out with reference to another church.}
- I chose to speak about Lucca because in September I cam going there for six weeks. {Talk a bit about the school and point it put on the map. Talk about why I am going.}
So, there you have it. I have got numbers 1 and 2 pretty well straight in my mind. Number 4 will be easy. I will work on Number 3 this afternoon. This has to be a speech so no reading it from a paper. We can have cards. What I found from last semester that works well for me, is to have the points I want to make listed in English and the Italian words I need, especially the ones I had to look up like "La cittadinanza"–the inhabitants of a city–written on the card, too. Hmmm, actually, perhaps I don’t need to write down "La cittadinanza" because I am retaining it pretty well.
This morning I got up, put the ingredients for a loaf in the machine and then made some fresh scones. Using the oven thermometer that I bought the other day, we are finding that, as we thought, the settings on the oven are NOT accurate so they have to be set higher than the recipe calls for. For example. the recipe for scones says preheat the oven to 400 degrees and check on the scones after 12 minutes. I set the temperature to 415 degrees and check on them after 17 minutes which seems to work out pretty well.
Ok, off to work on "Lucca, la città delle chiesi centi."
QUOTATIONS: Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the
end of the day saying, "I will try again tomorrow".
– – Mary Anne Radmacher-Hershey
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Ci vedo dopo…. see you later…
we have an oven like that too. Interestingly enough, its off by 150 degrees. So, it just takes adjusting.
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Your speech sounds very interesting. I can’t wait to read your entries from Lucca this fall! Hugs, M
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Good luck with your speech, it takes planning and you seem to have that mastered.
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I hope your speech goes well and your warm scones sound yummy!
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i bought some whole wheat flour and yeast for my bread machine. I have to find some yummy recipes now 😉
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Wow! That’s a lot to include in a speech. I wish that I had practiced my French more. You inspire me. I cannot wait until I retire! 🙂
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would love to hear your speech. sounds like it will be very interesting. take care,
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🙂 sounds like you are mastering italian very well.
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I don’t like giving oral presentations at uni. I always get so nervous.
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May your speech go well.
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Lucca sounds like a fabulous place to visit, in addition to it having the language school. I’d love seeing all those churches, and the wall, also! hugs, Weesprite
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ryn: They’re actually Canadian Geese 🙂
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ryc: (to the comment on my blog)… I decided not to put a ladybug on this tattoo anywhere. I thought about it, and decided I wanted this to stand alone because of how much it means about my relationship with J. I *will* be getting a ladybug at some point… just probably on my other shoulder. *yes, your son has corrupted me and turned me into a tattoo loving freak :)*
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Lardo is another regional specialty, as is ribollita. The walls saved the city in 1812 when a massive flood of the Serchio River inundated the valley. Elisa Bonaparte Baciocchi was governing Lucca at the time from her villa outside the walls, and when she tried to get into the city for safety, the people didn’t want to open the gates for fear of the surging waters. Lest they let their princess — and, more important, the sister of Europe’s emperor — drown, however, they hoisted her highness over the walls rather unceremoniously with the help of a crane.
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