Euskaraldia comes back. Apparently, it will be in the spring of next year. They have already presented it and the truth is that it has surprised me; not Euskaraldia himself, but his motto: We'll do it by moving around.
The first time I have read or heard it, the title of the work they put to perform the written expression test in a EGA exam in the 1990s comes to mind: “How do you see us?” I mean, how the Basques looked at us. Or what did you think about us? Well, at that time, jokes arose between professors and scholars who would perhaps have surprised us to be astonished, astonished, insensitive or who knows how. And so we stay with some of us, watching that title, and so I stayed moving around with each other, ignoring what we would do, every time I read what I read.
At first I thought it was a proposal for a dance in living flesh, but who knows, maybe we will push ourselves, we will have to kiss, overcome or concentrate until we are all in bonfire, who knows!
At first I thought it was a proposal for a dance in living flesh, but who knows, maybe we will push ourselves, we will have to kiss, overcome or concentrate until we are all in bonfire, who knows! In any case, if there is something that favors the Basque country, it is welcome, because I am sure we are going to get together in that task, because it is worth it.
I don't know! Excuse me for the boldness, reader, because I am not who to say anything to anyone about the suitability of the motto of Euskaraldia, but I would dare to “move”, for example, that it would be more natural, understandable, expressive and, in short, more communicative to express what with these two words it has been intended to understand.
The Basque Country has three main legs or bases: correctness, pertinence and honesty. I heard something about Kike Amonarriz. And I think that "moving" fails in one of the three. I'm not going to say it's not fair, but I'll just ask you one question. Is it right, can it be right, it's not right or it's not honest?