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The National Museum of Language
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  • Gloves

Gloves

/ Italian humor, What Makes People Laugh / By em

How do gloves greet each other when they meet on the street?

They shake hands.

Cosa fanno i guanto quando si incontrano per strada? 

Si salutano con unda stretta di mano.

Source

Zukhare, Muhammad Sibghatullah Shah, ed. Italiani Scherzi per bambini. Middletown, DE, 21 Oct. 2023.

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      • Social Justice Themes in Song and Verse from Africa
      • Authoritarianism Poetry
        • A Psalm to Lament Babylon
        • A Sunflower in Your Hair
        • Alcaeus
        • Archilochus
        • Ballad of the Army Carts
        • Demos Is Done
        • Forced March
        • Hecuba
        • Homeland and Life
        • Man of the Millennium
        • Sententiae
        • In Spite of You
        • The Will to Life
        • Ukrainian War Poets
      • Colonialism
        • Here Comes Ruy’s Steamer
        • An Inheritance
        • Royal Hymn of Hammurabi
        • Slashed Country – Pais Sajado
        • Song of the Machila Bearers
        • The Wind that Shakes the Barley
      • Economics Poetry
        • Complaint
        • Here Comes Ruy’s Steamer
        • Ancient Egyptian Poetry
        • Elegies
        • Homeland and Life
        • In Spite of You
        • Rhymed Observations
        • Theognis
        • Works and Days
      • Gender
        • Biographies
        • The Applicant
        • Fate
        • Home Is a Woman
        • I Cut My Black Hair
        • Lady Lazarus
        • Marriage
        • Men
        • the mother
        • Rhymed Observations
        • Silly Men Who Accuse
        • Uncovered
        • War Song
        • Why Was I Born a Girl?
      • Identity and Ethnicity
        • Beggar Boy
        • Churchbells
        • Cross
        • It’s Movement Time
        • The Jester
        • Lantern and Glass
        • Naming Things
        • Pais Sajado
        • Privilege Is
        • Self-portrait with Phonemic Analysis
        • Spring in New Hampshire
        • When You Return
        • The Wind that Shakes the Barley
        • With Whom Shall I Sing?
      • Poetry by Country
        • African Poetry Live Event
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      • Arthur the Rat
      • DARE Field Research Game
      • Test Your Knowledge
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      • Noah Webster
        • Webster Comic Strip
      • Early 19th Century Newspapers
        • American Daily and Commercial Advertiser – Page 1
        • American and Commercial Daily Advertiser – Page 6
      • Influential People
    • Philogelos: The First Joke Book
    • The Moveable Museum
    • International Flag of Language
    • Writing Language: Passing it On
  • News and Features
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      • Lack of Translators in Medical Settings
      • 33 Translations of a Poem by Lidia Kosk
      • Language News from Alaska
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      • Language News from Georgia
      • Language News from Hawaii
      • Language News from Indiana
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        • Bocadillos Linqüísticos Podcast Presentation
      • Language News From Washington
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      • Language News from Turkiye
      • Language News from the UK
    • Immigrant Success Stories
    • Interviews
      • Interview with Gregory J. Nedved
      • Interview with Dr. Laura Murray
      • Interview with Linda Murphy Marshall
      • Interview with Maarit Jaakkola, Ph.D.
      • Interview with Toni Stillman, Founder of Seedtime Multilingual
      • Interview with Tim Brookes of the Endangered Alphabets Project
      • Interview with Keith Cunningham, PhD Candidate at Georgetown University
      • Interview with Brandon Locke
      • Interview with Chelsea McCracken
      • Interview with Lynne Murphy, Author of “The Prodigal Tongue”
      • Interview with Vidya Nahar, Author and STARTALK Instructor
      • Interview with Kathy Olson-Studler
      • Interview with Victor Santos, Founder and CEO of Linguacious LLC.
      • Interview with Dr. Edwige Simon of University of Colorado- Boulder
      • Interview with Gina Valle, Author of The Best of All Worlds
    • Teacher’s Corner
      • ProLingua – Resources for ESL Teachers
      • Become a Virtual Freelance Language Tester
      • A Guide to Language Proficiency Exams
      • The Languages of Science
      • Summer Camp Language Villages
      • Learning Through Puzzles
      • Dual Language Education in Washington State – Becoming Law
      • Threatened Language Programs in Universities
      • Language Learning with Chat GPT
      • The Case of Computer Coding or Computer Science Counting as a World Languages Credit
      • NNELL’s Summer Institute 2023
      • An Outstanding Japanese Language Program
      • COVID-19 and Language Education: What occurred and what the future may hold
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      • Native Words Resources
    • Partner Language Museums
      • Overview of Eurotales, an Emerging Museum of European Languages
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This is an alternative name for a province in western China, now known as Qinghai, which literally means “blue sea”.  Kokonor Lake, located in Qinghai, is the largest saline lake in China.

The area of Guanxi, meaning “west of the passes”, refers to the area around the capital city of Chang’an.

Before China’s unification under the Qin dynasty in 221 B.C. there were several competing smaller kingdoms.  Han and Qin were two of these kingdoms. Han was located east of famous mountain passes that separated that area from the power base of the Qin dynasty, with its capital in Chang’an. The Qin dynasty itself only lasted about 15 years after unification due to its draconian rule, but soldiers under Qin rule retained a reputation as strong fighters.

Soldiers of that time commonly wore a white head cloth, similar to what is still worn by some peasants in China today. The implication is that the conscripts were so young that they didn’t know how to wrap their head cloths, and needed help from elders.

Located near the Tang capital city of Chang’an, site of the modern city of Xi’an in Shaanxi province, in central China.

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