Bengali is an Indo-Aryan language possessing a history and tradition of at least a millennium, with a rich tradition of folklore and folk literature. Folk rhymes form an important part of this tradition.
Syed Mohammed Shahed from Dhaka University has written a fine article on this together with a nice collection of rhymes. Here is a collection of Bengali rhymes in PDF and txt format.
Don't forget to send me your own collection of Bangla rhymes - I will add it to the PDF file with proper credits. Also, my Bangla spelling is not what it used to be. If you spot any errors, please feel free to send in your corrections.
July 24, 2008
July 12, 2008
First, kill a medium sized dog :)
China, apparently, has banned all 'fragrant' (read DOG) meat in its Olympic restaurants. Strange are ways of Mao-land but that definitely piqued this armchair chef's curiosity. How would you cook a dog - wedding style, no less? Hmm - according to this article, you start by killing a medium sized dog. That did it for me. I can just about handle the thought of clammy testicles staring sadly behind the poor doggie's penis (yum!) - but kill a medium sized dog ? No way. Fuck off.
So much for cultural dogmas.
Don't let me keep you - so here is the recipe ...
1. First, kill a medium sized dog, then burn off the fur over a hot fire.
2. Carefully remove the skin while still warm and set aside for later (may be used in other recpies)
3. Cut meat into 1″ cubes. Marinade meat in mixture of vinegar, peppercorn, salt and garlic for 2 hours.
4. Fry meat in oil using a large wok over an open fire, then add onions and chopped pineapple and suate until tender.
5. Pour in tomato sauce and boiling water, add green peper, bay leaf and tabasco.
6. Cover and simmer over warm coals until meat is tender. Blend in liver spread and cook for additional 5-7 minutes.
July 11, 2008
OOoLateX : Using LaTeX in OpenOffice documents
OOoLatex is a set marcos designed to provide latex support into OpenOffice. Complex equations can be inserted as images, the latex code is saved into the image attribute while simpler equations are expanded into symbol characters to be inserted as text.
Here are the instructions to install and uninstall this package on Ubuntu 8.04 with minimal hassle. Thanks a million to Toufik on the Ubuntu forum who posted these instructions originally. If you are on the Ubuntu forum and find these instructions useful, now is the time to thank Toufik for such a useful post. It is godsend for scientists who love OpenOffice to prepare slides that have loads of equations. And LaTeX rules in equation land.
Step 1. Install the dependencies
sudo apt-get install texlive imagemagick epstool
Step 2. Install the fonts.
mkdir OOoLatexFonts
cd OOoLatexFonts
wget http://mesh.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/ooolatex/OOoLatexFonts.zip
unzip OOoLatexFonts.zip
cd ..
sudo mv OOoLatexFonts /usr/share/fonts/truetype/.
sudo fc-cache -f /usr/share/fonts/truetype
Step 3. Install the binaries for EMF
This involves installing the latex2emf program.The easiest way to install it is to grab the binaries directly from the OOoLatex website: http://sourceforge.net/project/showf...roup_id=150801
- Ubuntu i386 or 64bits choose latex2emf_Linux_i386_binary.tar.gz
- Ubuntu PPC choose latex2emf_Linux_PPC_binary.tar.gz
- Others, you'll need to compile from source (grab OOoLatexEmf_noarch_src.tar.gz)
Once downloaded, go to the directory where you've downloaded:
tar -xzvf latex2emf_Linux_i386_binary.tar.gz
cd latex2emf_Linux_i386_binary/
sudo ./install.sh
Step 4. Install the oxt file
And finally, you can now install the extension! But first download the extension here:
http://sourceforge.net/project/showf...roup_id=150801
At the time of writing this post, the latest one was OOoLatex-4.0.0-beta-2-linux.oxt
There are two types of installation. The administrator mode is useful when installing for a lot of users but each user is not allowed to modify the configuration (most notably the shortcuts), only root can do that. Therefore I recommend, for normal user, to install in the single-user mode.
- In a terminal :
Single-user Mode/usr/lib/openoffice/program/unopkg.bin add OOoLatex-4.0.0-beta-2-linux.oxt
sudo /usr/lib/openoffice/program/unopkg.bin add --shared OOoLatex-4.0.0-beta-2-linux.oxt
Usage
After installation, try
The module Equation transform a LaTeX code into an image. Two formats are proposed: .png and .emf. You probably know PNG, this is a kind of "normal" image. If you rescale it, you'll see pixel. A way to circumvent this problem is to increase the resolution (dpi) but you'll get larger files! Or to use the EMF format which is a scalable image: the equation is vectorised and don't loose resolution when you rescale it! This is probably the better choice but you need then some binaries (see above). Selecting an equation and opening the equation dialog box allows editing of the equation.
The module Expand was called Inline in the first versions of OOoLatex. Basically, it transforms (expands) the LaTeX special characters into ones that are usable by OpenOffice. This is done (partly) via the STIX general fonts. The interests of Expand is to include LaTeX characters directly in a sentence without requiring the insertion of an image (as in Equation). Apparently not all LaTeX code can be expanded, that's why a list is offered in the dialog box.
To Remove
Remove the extension:
Single User mode:
/usr/lib/openoffice/program/unopkg.bin remove net.sourceforge.ooolatex
sudo /usr/lib/openoffice/program/unopkg.bin remove --shared net.sourceforge.ooolatex
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