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O Cebreiro not O'Cebreiro

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You must really dislike Brierley then!!!
Oh yes! I started a thread about it to discover how it started, and he got the blame. But I also had a look at my sello from the municipal albergue in O Cebreiro (2003) and found it said "O'Cebreiro". He is also to blame for some confusion between cruceiro just out of Burguete and the White Cross, and the appearance of a "vision" of the BVM in an oak tree at Ponferrada rather than an actual figure of the BVM.
 
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This thread made more sense, and was funnier, when the posts (beginning with my pet peeve) followed another thread that began with BROWNCOUNTYBOB's pet peeve in which he referred to O Cebreiro as O'Cebreiro.
 
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I have found that Brierley has all the accuracy and detail that one would expect of a mystic.
I don't care!😅 Brierley's maps rock! They are simple to look at for a quick overview and are still my favorite in paper form. I don't really care if they are off a kilometer "here or there" cuz I get there eventually. As for his mysticism...I pass on by.
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
This thread made more sense, and was funnier, when the posts (beginning with my pet peeve) followed another thread that began with BrowncountyBob's pet peeve in which he referred to O Cebreiro as O'Cebreiro.
BrowncountyBob's thread was about pilgrims blocking the trail and was not intended as being funny, not about silly grammatical spelling mistakes, that is why they were moved to their own thread.
 
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And is it: We arrived in O Cebreiro or We arrived in Cebreiro? Tomorrow we will walk to O Cebreiro or Tomorrow we will walk to Cebreiro? 🤔🤭
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
My pet peeve is the number of people who refer to O Cebreiro as O'Cebreiro :) .
Why?
I see it's wrong but is it really such a big issue?
If this is your biggest worry in life, you must be doing quite well.
I'll try to not make that mistake again, but with dyslexia (why such a hard word to spell?) I'm not making any guarantees. Especially when Brierley has the apostrophe.
Buen Camino
 
Perhaps it would be helpful if people understood what the O in O Cebreiro means.
It's the masculine definite article in galician/galego.
So O Cebreiro means The Cebreiro. (I don't know if Cebreiro has an English translation)
And A is the feminine definite article, as in A Coruña.
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Funny I never knew it didn’t have an apostrophe!!!! Both both Frances , I passed it by… and when I type it I’ve found my lazy self writing O’Cebrio… so I’m sure to be upsetting- lol.
Both Frances I walked on to Triacastela…
 
Read this and immediately (and somewhat worryingly) thought of ….

O Cebreiro, where the wind comes sweepin' down the plain
And the wavin' wheat can sure smell sweet
When the wind comes right behind the rain.

sad but then …
 
Possibly the ones spelling it incorrectly are Irish.🤔...and you won't know who they are on the Camino.😅
Brierley's books spell it O'Cebreiro and not as you have it. It is also pronounced oh-thay-bray-air-o. And when googling your spelling, the spelling always comes up as Brierley has it.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
Funny I never knew it didn’t have an apostrophe!!!! Both both Frances , I passed it by… and when I type it I’ve found my lazy self writing O’Cebrio… so I’m sure to be upsetting- lol.
Both Frances I walked on to Triacastela…
When you Google, oce. . . O'C comes up. Brierley also spells it with an apostrophe. What is the reliable source for spelling it another way? I will check my photo book to see how the sign for the entrance to town has it.
 
When you Google, oce. . . O'C comes up. Brierley also spells it with an apostrophe. What is the reliable source for spelling it another way? I will check my photo book to see how the sign for the entrance to town has it.
You need to Google "O Cebreiro" - the proper galician spelling of the place, with a space between the O and the C.
Perhaps a Spanish site will convince you?

Screenshot_20211016-093448_Firefox.jpg
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Brierley also spells it with an apostrophe. What is the reliable source for spelling it another way?
The spelling for O Cebreiro in Brierley's guidebooks is not consistent. You can find both the spelling with an apostrophe (wrong) and without an apostrophe (correct) on the same page in some editions. Yes, there is an official spelling. The correct spelling is what Galician regional law and Spanish national law says. The name of the town is spelled O Cebreiro.
 
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Brierley's books spell it O'Cebreiro and not as you have it. It is also pronounced oh-thay-bray-air-o. And when googling your spelling, the spelling always comes up as Brierley has it.
I definitely think using the apostrophe "looks" better to my American eyes. The O standing alone looks odd to me, even though it is correct.
 
I see it's wrong but is it really such a big issue?
If this is your biggest worry in life, you must be doing quite well.
Whether foreigners who don't speak the language get place names in foreign countries wrong or not - no, it is not a big issue at all.

There are some, though, who take an interest in the things that they notice when travelling and sometimes they try to understand why something is the way it is and not different. And sometimes it is not trivial when you look at the story behind it.
 
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Whether foreigners who don't speak the language get place names in foreign countries wrong or not - no, it is not a big issue at all.

There are some, though, who take an interest in the things that they notice when travelling and sometimes they try to understand why something is the way it is and not different. And sometimes it is not trivial when you look at the story behind it.
Oh, yes, very much agree with the sentiments. It's just I'm not a wordy person, but numbers now ...
I'm also a total sucker for information boards while I'm out walking
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
My pet peeve did make a lot more sense and was funnier when it followed BROWNCOUNTYBOB's "Senda Pet Peeve" (q.v.)

No worries, your pet peeve still makes sense and I can totally relate to it. (have to admit though I have the tendency to get lost in trivia and seemingly useless bits of information) :cool:
 
This thread has become unnecessarily confrontational over a trivial matter. Some posts have been deleted and the thread closed.

We can all try to demonstrate the correct spelling of O Cebreiro in future, but there will be those who continue to make this mistake. And others ("albergue" comes to mind) 😳.
 
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