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Pascal Bridgemohan (standard:travel stories, 608 words) | |||
Author: Juggernaut | Added: Mar 03 2013 | Views/Reads: 2942/1974 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Pascal is an unusaul name for Trinidad Indian and Bridgemohan is an unusaul spelling for Brijmohan. Juggernaut always facinated with this kind of details. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story “You know my dad was a self-taught computer programming guru in early seventies and maybe I was named after the computer program,” replied Pascal. “If that were the case you may be the first person named after Pascal, the French man that invented the program,” laughed Juggernaut. “Don't tell me that my last name Bridgemohan has a story behind as well,” Pascal looked at Juggernaut with curiosity. “I have a feeling when your forefather from India landed in Trinidad on boat in 19th century, at the customs, the officers perhaps mostly British couldn't understand the Indians' accent and made up spellings on phonetics; thus a name sounding like Brijmohan was recorded as Bridgemohan on the landing documents. You guys stuck with unusual spellings like Persad or Persaud for Prasad, but again Trinidadians are ingenious in inventing new expressions and names the rest of world has no clue like limin for hanging out, fete for partying, scruntin for deprivation, saga boy for ladies man and a sustained hissing sound to make a pass at women.” “We Trinidadians invented steel band from old oil steel drums to sound like piano so making up words come easy for us,” Pascal gave a confident look. Juggernaut bade farewell to Pascal at the market place thanking him for bringing back his memories of using large punch machines with loud sound of the electric motor and the ‘thud' it makes as each key was pressed and stacks of punched computer cards to be read on mainframe computers. The images of piles of computer paper with the data printed in dot format and stacks of punched computer cards on the desk remained as distant memory in Juggernaut's mind. Tweet
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