Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Robbery sends bar owner to hospital

A adult male who co-owns northerly Edmonton's Flag Stop Bar and Grille is recouping from serious hurts after it's considered two adult males assailed him inside his line overnight.

The incident passed off around 3 a.m. at 124th Street and 132nd Boulevard.

Safeer Nazir feeds the establishment alongside his uncle Muhammed Moqusood, whom he identifies as the dupe. He tells CTV two assaulters concealed inside the bar until the doors were locked.

"Apparently they concealed up in the roof in that respect in the women's washroom and I estimate when everybody went forth (my uncle) was positioning the money off, they leapt him from behind," said Nazir.

"We 're kinda worried, you know, what fell out... They bound him in the chair with the masking paper and bound his feet and his helping hands and everything." .

The assault is said to be serious in nature, with a important blood trail staying at the crime scene cleanup.

Moqusood, who endured traumas to his side and head, finally made out to get away and visit constabularies.

He is carried to be discharged from the infirmary in a couple of days, a good deal to the rest period of his nephew.

"Once the money's gone, the money's gone... but it's not about the money, it's about the individual's sprightliness, right?" said Nazir.

It's guessed ten spots of ks of dollars were taken from the safe during the incident.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Alibata In The Modern World

Who says Alibata isn't available and isn't useful nowadays? You're absolutely wrong if that's what you think as I have found something which is considered as a very important gadget in our daily life which has alibata in it...

A very cool nokia cellphone - alibata edition.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Alibata

Baybayin or Alibata (known in Unicode as the Tagalog script) is a pre-Hispanic Philippine writing system that originated from the Javanese script Old Kawi. The writing system is a member of the Brahmic family (and an offshoot of the Vatteluttu alphabet) and is believed to be in use as early as the 14th century. It continued to be in use during the Spanish colonization of the Philippines up until the late 19th Century. The term baybayin literally means spelling. Closely related scripts are Hanunóo, Buhid, and Tagbanwa.

USAGE:

The writing system is an abugida system using consonant-vowel combinations. Each character, written in its basic form, is a consonant ending with the vowel "A". To produce consonants ending with the other vowel sounds, a mark is placed either above the consonant (to produce an "E" or "I" sound) or below the consonant (to produce an "O" or "U" sound). The mark is called a kudlit. The kudlit does not apply to stand-alone vowels. Vowels themselves have their own glyphs. There is only one symbol for D or R as they were allophones in most languages of the Philippines, wherein D fell in initial, final, pre-consonantal or post-consonatal positions and R in intervocalic positions.

In its original form however, a stand-alone consonant (consonants not ending with any vowel sound) cannot be produced, in which case these were simply not written and the reader would fill in the missing consonants through context. This method, however, was particularly hard for the Spanish priests who were translating books into the native language. Because of this Father Francisco Lopez introduced his own kudlit in 1620 that eliminated the vowel sound. The kudlit was in the form of a "+" sign, in reference to Christianity. This cross-shaped kudlit functions exactly the same as the virama in the Devanagari script of India. In fact, Unicode calls this kudlit the Tagalog Sign Virama.