Liste des Groupes | Revenir à p relativity |
On 3/12/25 7:04 PM, % wrote:Here's what the ancestor must be saying right now:Jim Pennino wrote:The original "Jim Pennino" died in 2020. This one up there is an imposter; or hell, who knows, could he be reading my dick from his grave too? 30 years of it alive has been long enough.In sci.physics % <pursent100@gmail.com> wrote:quarter after eightPhysfitfreak wrote:>On 3/12/25 4:37 PM, % wrote:Jim Pennino wrote:>In sci.physics % <pursent100@gmail.com> wrote:no way they were at warPhysfitfreak wrote:>Poor "Jim Pennino".>
>
who the fk is Poor "Jim Pennino".
sounds like a sicilian mob boss name
Actually, if you go back to 19th Century Palermo...
>
>
>
"Pennino" has Arabic origin (Bin Nino - meaning son of Nino). Sicilians
are mainly Arabs themselves. Their Italian accent is exactly like Arabs
of north Africa speaking Italian.
As usual, wrong.
>
Italian: from a diminutive of Penna or, in southern Italy, a
topographical name from Sicilian pinninu ‘steeply sloping terrain or street’.
>>>my father was there during ww2
They brought a bit of their culture into USA too. And just like Arabs,
when Americans began mistreating and ridiculing them inside USA, they
showed the Americans what Modern Humans could do to them!
>
>
And in which century was WWII?
>
So the guy doesn't know what he's talking about. The word "pinninu" he has confused the name with, might be a form of "pannolino" pronounced elsewhere in Italy, which translates to "diaper"! So I doubt his name could be diaper. Hehe :)
Most "B"s among Arabs turn into "P"s as you go north geographically. So my bet is originally it was Bin Nino.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.