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The Susu are primarily farmers, with rice and millet being their two principal crops. [32] Mangoes, pineapples, and coconuts are also grown. The Susu are also known as skilled traders and blacksmiths. [32] The women make various kinds of palm oil from palm nuts. Ancient Susu houses were typically made of either mud or cement blocks, depending ...
Susana Raquel Pecoraro was born in Buenos Aires in 1952. She enrolled at the Dramatic Arts Conservatory in 1970 and graduated in 1975. She debuted in the theatre of Argentina in 1976, with a role in Yo, Argentino (I'm (a disinterested) Argentine), and on television in a 1977 Channel 13 sitcom.
Where Are You My Love, That I Cannot Find You? (Spanish: ¿Dónde estás amor de mi vida que no te puedo encontrar?) is a 1992 Argentine drama film directed by Juan José Jusid and co-written with Ana María Shua.
Susu is an SOV language, Poss-N, N-D, generally suffixing, non-pro-drop, wh-in-situ, with no agreement affixes on the verb, no noun classes, no gender, and with a clitic plural marker which attaches to the last element of the NP (N or D, typically), but does not co-occur with numerals.
Susu may refer to: Susu people or Soussou, an ethnic group in Guinea; Susu language, language spoken by this ethnic group; Sosso Empire, a twelfth-century Takrur kingdom of West Africa; Susu (savings), an informal savings account practiced in the Caribbean; Susu account, a saving scheme for poor people in Ghana; SUSU may refer to:
Such groups are operated globally, but have over 200 different names that vary from country to country. [2] [3] Some of those names become loanwords between languages.In the Romance languages of Latin America, other regional names for tandas include cundina (Mexico), susu (Caribbean islands), junta (Peru), sand (Venezuela), cuchubale (El Salvador and Guatemala), [4] and polla (Chile ...
The Sosso Empire, also written as Soso or Susu, or alternatively Kaniaga, ...
A susu or sou-sou or osusu or asue (also known as a merry-go-round, [1] Partner, or Pawdna in Jamaica; [2] sol in Haiti;, [3] san in Dominican Republic, [4] and Njangi in Cameroon [5]) is a form of rotating savings and credit association, a type of informal savings club arrangement between a small group of people who take turns by throwing hand as the partners call it.