Tiki Central / General Tiki
la maison du jouir
Pages: 1 12 replies
V
virani
Posted
posted
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Fri, Feb 6, 2004 5:00 AM
Finally, after hesitating between Hawaii and Tahiti, I’m going with my beautiful vahiné for our honeymoon in may and june to the Marquisas islands ! we’ll take the Aranui (a boat that goes through the islands for picking the copra and delivering marchandises) in Tahiti, then it’ll goes to the Marquesas for 15 days and then we’ll return to Tahiti and Moorea…. |
T
tikifish
Posted
posted
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Fri, Feb 6, 2004 8:39 AM
So what's the house of the day? :) |
T
Tiki_Bong
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Fri, Feb 6, 2004 10:00 AM
TikiFish, Is that that 'French' language I've been hearing so much about lately? |
SDT
Sweet Daddy Tiki
Posted
posted
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Fri, Feb 6, 2004 11:54 AM
Tikifish, that's "jouir" not "jour"."La maison de jouir" means "House of Pleasure", the name of Paul Gaugin's house at Hiva-oa in the Marquesas. (if i sound at all scholarly, it's only because I read this in a children's book about Gaugin I bought at Goodwill. Lots of pretty pictures!) |
UB
Unga Bunga
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Feb 6, 2004 12:26 PM
oui oui fee fee tiki |
T
tikifish
Posted
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Fri, Feb 6, 2004 1:12 PM
The house of pleasure! I LIKE THE SOUND OF THAT! RrroooWWWOoooor I thought the 'I' was a typo. I was never so good with the french verbs. Jouir = to play, actually, so it is 'THE HOUSE OF TO PLAY'. Thus endeth the french lessons! |
B
bigbrotiki
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Feb 6, 2004 2:18 PM
That, off course, is open to interpretation. Gauguin liked to provoke the local Bishop with his bohemian lifestyle, and thus the carved frame over his entrance has widely been translated with "House Of Pleasure". Congrats guys on taking that trip, to the cradle of Tiki. Gauguin's house is unfortunately just a reproduction, ironically no one could afford the REAL carved doorframes in the Marquesas nowadays. But there are fine small Museums on several islands with interesting artifacts. And of course there is nothing more rewarding than visiting actual Tiki temples in the jungle, like the one in the Taipi valley, where Melville lived with the Taipi tribe after he jumped ship. Please convey my warm regards to Didier, (if he is the guide on your trip) and have him send me his e-mail address, I lost it. I have been thinking of getting a group of Tiki Centralites together to do the journey again, that would be a blast. I have not been on their new ship, the old Aranui was a rustbucket made in Bremen, Germany in the 50s. It is just a little costly (in the 3 to 4 grand range) for non-lecturers, so I don't know who can spring for that, sort of a once in a lifetime deal for most, I would think. |
T
tikibars
Posted
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Fri, Feb 6, 2004 3:07 PM
Give me one year notice, and I'm in. |
P
pablus
Posted
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Fri, Feb 6, 2004 3:24 PM
I'd need a year, too. Not for the money or scheduling but to make sure the rum supply was capable of sustaining me for such a voyage. |
V
virani
Posted
posted
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 4:23 AM
You can check out the ARANUI web site at http://www.aranui.com |
T
Tikifrog
Posted
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 11:23 AM
Thanks for the info Virani. All of this sounds great. |
SDT
Sweet Daddy Tiki
Posted
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 12:19 PM
Bien sûr, all us Canadians are parfaitement bilingues :lol: |
F
Formikahini
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Mon, Feb 9, 2004 12:22 PM
The language teacher in me can't let this go: jouer - to play you decide which is better. |
Pages: 1 12 replies