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Located in Nombre de Dios in the Colon region, Casita Rio Indio has accommodations with free private parking.
Some accommodations include a terrace with river views, a fully equipped kitchenette and a private bathroom with shower.
Guests can also relax in the garden.
The nearest airport is Albrook «Marcos A. Gelabert» International Airport, 106.2 km from the lodge.
Couples in particular like the location – they rated it 9.4 for a two-person trip.
Casita Rio Indio has been welcoming Booking.com guests since Mar 23, 2017
Distance in property description is calculated using © OpenStreetMap
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Non-smoking rooms
Free parking
Family rooms
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Top Location: Highly rated by recent guests (9.4)
Free Private Parking Available On Site
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Room Type
Sleeps
Double Room with Garden View
1 full bed
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Double Room with Garden View
2 twin beds
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Double Room with Private Bathroom
1 full bed
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Family Room with Garden View
1 full bed
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1 bunk bed
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Deluxe Queen Room
1 queen bed
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Area info *
Outdoors
BBQ facilities
Terrace
Garden
Kitchen
Shared kitchen
Pets are allowed. Charges may apply.
Activities
Walking tours
Snorkeling
Horseback riding
Additional charge
Hiking
Additional charge
Canoeing
Additional charge
Fishing
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Internet
No internet access available.
Parking
Free private parking is available on site (reservation is not needed).
Parking garage
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Laundry
General
Family rooms
Non-smoking rooms
Languages Spoken
German
English
Spanish
French
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2:00 PM — 9:00 PM
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Until 1:00 PM
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Children & Beds
Children of all ages are welcome.
Children 3 and above are considered adults at this property.
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Cribs and extra beds aren’t available at this property.
No age restriction
There’s no age requirement for check-in
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Cash only
This property only accepts cash payments.
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El empoderamiento de los hablantes de las lenguas indígenas es el principal punto de la hoja de ruta estratégica para el Decenio de las Lenguas Indígenas (2022-2032), aprobada el 28 de febrero en Ciudad de México al término de la reunión de alto nivel “Construyendo un Decenio de Acciones para las Lenguas Indígenas”.
Más de 500 participantes de 50 países, entre ellos ministros de gobierno, líderes indígenas, investigadores, entidades públicas y privadas y otros expertos, aprobaron esta hoja de ruta, llamada “Declaración de Los Pinos”, al término del evento de dos días organizado por la UNESCO y el gobierno mexicano. Bajo el lema “Nada sin nosotros”, la Declaración sitúa a los pueblos indígenas en el centro de sus recomendaciones.
La Declaración, concebida para inspirar un plan de acción mundial para el Decenio, pide que se apliquen los derechos internacionalmente reconocidos de los pueblos indígenas, que se recogen en particular en la Declaración de las Naciones Unidas sobre los Derechos de los Pueblos Indígenas de 2007 y el Plan de Acción de las Naciones Unidas sobre los derechos de los pueblos indígenas de 2017, y otros instrumentos normativos, como la Convención relativa a la lucha contra las discriminaciones en la esfera de la enseñanza de 1960, la Convención Internacional sobre la Eliminación de todas las Formas de Discriminación Racial (1965), el Pacto Internacional de Derechos Civiles y Políticos y el Pacto Internacional de Derechos Económicos, Sociales y Culturales (1966).
En sus propuestas estratégicas para el Decenio, la Declaración de Los Pinos hace hincapié en los derechos de los pueblos indígenas a la libertad de expresión, a la educación en su idioma materno y a la participación en la vida pública utilizando sus idiomas, como requisitos previos para la supervivencia de los idiomas indígenas, muchos de los cuales están actualmente al borde de la extinción. Con respecto a la participación en la vida pública, en la Declaración se destaca la importancia de permitir el uso de los idiomas indígenas en los sistemas de justicia, los medios de comunicación, la esfera laboral y los programas de salud. También señala el potencial de las tecnologías digitales para apoyar el uso y la preservación de esos idiomas.
A partir de la experiencia adquirida durante el Año Internacional de las Lenguas Indígenas (2019), la Declaración reconoce la importancia de las lenguas indígenas para la cohesión y la inclusión social, los derechos culturales, la salud y la justicia. También destaca la utilidad de las lenguas indígenas para el desarrollo sostenible y la preservación de la diversidad biológica, ya que conllevan conocimientos ancestrales y tradicionales que unen a la humanidad con la naturaleza.
Los datos actuales indican que al menos el 40% de las 7.000 lenguas utilizadas en todo el mundo están en peligro de desaparecer. Aunque es difícil obtener cifras precisas, los expertos coinciden en que las lenguas indígenas son especialmente vulnerables porque muchas de ellas no se enseñan en la escuela ni se utilizan en la esfera pública.
El Atlas de las Lenguas de la UNESCO, una base de datos sobre prácticamente todas las lenguas humanas que estará disponible a finales de este año, aportará más información específica a este respecto.
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Más información sobre el Año Internacional de las Lenguas Indígenas y sus resultados
Encyclopedia of India » culture of India » Indian names (popular)
achadidi Sun, 10/07/2011 — 02:41
I have always wondered how Indians call their children, I met such interesting Indian names, Sanskrit, familiar by ear from mantras and hymns, and from mythology in general.
Sunny has already written that Indians choose their names from the stars.
I heard from other Indians I know that often Hindus give children the names of Hindu Gods, because then the Deity will patronize the child in life. And I have acquaintances of Hindus who bear the names of Gods. This Indian tradition is very similar to the Russian Orthodox tradition of naming a child according to the calendar, that is, in honor of the Christian saint to whom the day on which the child is baptized is dedicated, that is, they give him a name.
But some Indian names are just Sanskrit words, beautiful words for auspicious things, images, and even rituals .
Found a curious material — Top 10 most popular Indian (Hindu) names for boys and girls.
Data published based on internet statistics. After some names, I wrote the meanings of these words, if I knew.
1. The name must be short.
2. The name must be easy to pronounce.
3. The name should be easy to remember.
4. The pronunciation and spelling of a child’s name should not be complicated.
5. The name should not be too rare, but also not too frequent.
6. You should be proud of this name, obviously meaning its meaning, meaning and relevance to your child.
(for boys, that is)
1 : Amit — Amit
2 : Arjun — Arjun (translated as white, correlates with the legendary Arzhduna from the Mahabharata)
3 : Aditya — Aditya (translated from Sanskrit as Vedic sage)
9 : Rahul — Rahul (probably now very popular and boys are called in honor of Rahul Gandhi )
10: Anand — Anand (ananda is divine joy)
Other very popular Indian male names this is a rite in Hinduism, by the way)
Tarun — Tarun
, for girls;)
1: Maya — Maya (May) — illusion, illusoryness, this word came from Indian philosophy
2: Tara — Tara, Tara is Vishnu , goddess of wealth, probably everyone wants to have their own Lakshmi: 90 1 Jyoti — Jyoti (Jyoti) is just Light
9 : Madhu — Madhu (Madu) means Med
10 : Aparna — Aparna
Other popular female names in India (Sind)
Latha — Latha
Aarthi — Aarti — Hindu ritual with fires, beautiful…
Parvati — Parvati — wife of the Gods Shiva, Mother of all things…
A complete list of Indian (Hindu) names with their indication meanings, usually Sanskrit, you can find at http://hinduism. abou…
Author and source of publication:
achadidi especially for indonet.ru
Content Articles:
Old Indian names
Beautiful Indian names for girls
Indian names for boys
The most common Indian names
Indian surnames and triple name
India India India is a multicultural and religious country in which many languages are spoken. In Indian families, the name for the child is chosen based on the caste system, the sound of the local dialect and religious affiliation.
Photo: unsplash.com
Original names are paths to the country’s cultural code. In India, more and more families are choosing modern simplified names for naming a newborn. Traditional names are losing their popularity. Only in some regions the custom is preserved to choose a sonorous word from Sanskrit or from the Hindu pantheon as a name for a child.
Old Idian names consist of two parts: the first contains the name of a god or a local natural deity (Krishna, Sita, Shiva, Lakshmi, Ayapan, Murugan), and the second indicates a person’s religious affiliation.
The second part can convey a sacred meaning:
-pa — an indication to Buddhism.
IMPORTANT! An ancient belief says that the pronunciation of a name shortens the life of its bearer, so earlier a religious name was revealed only to a narrow circle of relatives. Wives were forbidden to address their husbands by their first names, and small children were given cute family nicknames.
Photo: unsplash.com
Among Indians who profess Christianity, there are Western variants of names. In Catholic families, the name of a famous saint is chosen for the newborn, and in Protestant families, names are chosen from traditional English naming conventions.
Photo: unsplash.com
Parents choose a name for their unborn child based on the religion and caste of the family. Ancient religious texts are a kind of dictionary of sacred names with a happy meaning. A child may receive several names at birth.
Several names given to a person at birth form a single name. Compound Indian names are written together. In the Latin version, they are divided into parts for the convenience of visual perception.
Photo: unsplash.com
Ayana — charm.
Amala — purity.
Amrit is immortality.
Ananda is the happiest.
Anima — insignificance.
Asha is a deity.
Bala is young looking.
Vasanta — spring.
Vijaya is victorious.
Vimala — purity.
Gauri is light.
The Gita is a good song.
Devi is a goddess.
Derga — forbidden.
Jaswinder — lightning.
Jibon is the life force.
Jyotsana is the light of the moon.
Divya is like a deity.
Diya — blinding.
Ila — close to the earth.
Indira is beautiful.
Indrajit is the warrior goddess Indra.
Isha is protective.
Kala is gifted.
Kalpana is a fantasy.
Kamala — red.
Kant — desired.
Kanya is young.
Karisma is wonderful.
Kor — regal.
Kumari is the daughter.
Lalit — cheerful disposition.
Lila is playful.
Lalivati is God’s will.
Madher is sweet.
Mala — decoration.
Malati is a jasmine flower.
Manju is a melody.
Maneesha is the wisest.
Marwa — marjoram.
Mina is a lunar month.
Mira is a future treasure.
Mohana is a charm.
Neha — pouring rain.
Neelam — sapphire.
The thread is eternal.
Niche — night.
Padmavati is like a lotus flower.
Parvati — who came from the mountains.
Perva — from the East.
Pernima full moon.
Mother — strong love.
Preity is loving.
Punita is the purest.
Pushpa — floral.
Rajani — night.
Radha is successful.
Rani is of royal blood.
Ratna is a jewel.
Reshmi is the tenderness of silk.
Ritika is made of copper.
Rishima is the blade of the moon.
Ruchi — luminous.
Sanjana is creative.
Sarala — straight.
Sarasvati — who owns the waters of the lake.
Svarna — nice color.
Star sitar.
Sonal — golden.
Sumana is friendly.
Sunita is respectable.
Tamaraa is a spice.
Trishna is thirsty.
Usha — dawn.
Harsha is delightful.
Chandra is lunar.
Chandrakanta — under lunar protection.
Shakti is ruling.
Shanti is calm.
Sharmila — protective.
Shreya is happy.
Aishvoya is rich.
Esha is desired.
Photo: unsplash.com
Ajiit is invincible.
Amar is peaceful.
Amrit is immortality.
Aniraddha — unhindered.
Anuj is the youngest in the family.
Aravind — lotus flower.
Arnav is like the ocean.
Arun is the rising sun.
Asim is a protector.
Ashoka — protected from sorrows.
Babar — lion.
Bazant — spring.
Bala is young.
Balarma — divine power.
Bijay — victorious.
Brama is the creator.
Bridgesh — royal.
Vanada — saving rain.
Vasu is the brightest.
Vivek is the wisest.
Vimal — purity.
Vir — kindness.
Vishnu is the name of the savior god.
Ganesha is a divine name, leader.
Govind is a seeker of the sacred cow.
Damodara — encircling.
Debdan — gifted by God.
Juggernaut is the master of the world.
Jagdish is the ruler of the world.
Jay is victorious.
Jirish — on the mountain.
Jitinder — fighting for Indra.
Dilip — protecting Delhi.
Isha — protection.
Kazi — shining.
Kalyan — pleasant appearance.
Kamal — red.
Cambodia is a handsome ruler.
Kiran — radiant.
Krishan — blackening.
Kumar is the youngest son.
Lakshman — lucky
Lal — playful.
Madhav — born in the spring.
Mani — precious stones.
Massoud is good luck.
Merali is a musical instrument.
Mukul — prosperity.
Nanda is joyful.
Nikhil — whole.
Nirav — quiet disposition.
Nishant — bringer of light.
Ohm — sound.
Perushottam is the highest.
Pollab — giving hope.
Prabodhan is of noble family.
Prabhu is creative.
Prakash is light.
Note — loving.
Ravi is sunny.
Raj is royal.
Rajesh is the ruler of kings.
Rahkesh is the ruler of the night.
Rama is satisfaction.
Ranj — fighting for victory.
Ratan — stones.
Rohan — sandalwood.
Savitar is the sun.
Sandar — beauty.
Sandip — divine light.
Satish is a divine name.
Serya is sunny.
Siddharth is the target.
Sudarshan is the correct view.
Sushil — decent.
Harinder — taming rain.
Harshal — happiness.
Chandr is lunar.
Shandar is pride.
Shankara is fortunate.
Shiva is a divine name.
Esmail — heard by God.
Yash is glorifying.
Photo: unsplash.com
Female:
Male:
Photo: unsplash.com
It is a tradition in Indian families to give a child a long name so that it contains all the important information about the family, caste, religion and protects from evil spirits. All family members are involved in choosing a name.
THIS IS INTERESTING! In some regions of India, there is still a wedding tradition that requires a woman who gets married to take not only her husband’s surname, but also his patronymic.