User:Blockinblox/Testwp-KNGPRWN

NOTICE: Blockinblox needs some money, okay... Please translate this message into your language for free, so that he can get the money for your doing the work...

This here is a taxobox, okay, but I still have to upload the template thing, you know.

Template:Taxobox begin Template:Taxobox image Template:Taxobox begin placement Template:Taxobox regnum entry Template:Taxobox phylum entry Template:Taxobox subphylum entry Template:Taxobox classis entry Template:Taxobox ordo entry Template:Taxobox subordo entry Template:Taxobox authority Template:Taxobox end placement Template:Taxobox section subdivision Panaeoidea

Aristeidae
Benthesicymidae
Penaeidae
Sicyoniidae
Solenoceridae

Sergestoidea

Luciferidae
Sergestidae

Template:Taxobox end

Hola! Okay, this will be a test wiki for the kingprawn dialect, okay. Although I myself am not a kingprawn, though I do speak this dialect fluently also and have the ability to write several articles, maybe 30 or 40 thereof, in this dialect myself, alright? Okay, basically, where I should start, is by saying that my kingprawn is good enough to, like they say, "make a roll with".., Now... About the dialect, it is spoken inside of a small region of the South Africa and is quite similar to the English, although not exactly, okay, especially in terms of the ortssoggraffee... Okay... Oh yeah, and the vocabulary too, I forgot the vocabulary... In terms of the ortssoggraffee, and also the vocabulary.

Sample article in the kingprawn: (this is still being worked on, okay) Prawns are like, these incredible, shrimp-like crustaceans, who are belonging to the sub-order Dendrobranchiata. They are easily distinguishing from the superficially-similar shrimp by the gill estructure, who are only superficially similar, which is branching in prawns (hence the name, dendro="tree"; branchia="gill", okay?), but which is lamellar in the shrimps okay. The sister taxon to Dendrobranchiata is Pleocyemata, which is containing all the true shrimps, crabs, lobsters, and etcetera.

The name of "prawn" is most often mis-applied, and most often to the shrimp, okay, generally being the larger of the species, such as the Leander serratus; in the United States, according to the 1911 World Encyclopedia, the word "prawn" was usually indicating a fresh-water shrimp or sometimes even a prawn. In the Middle English, the word "prawn" is most often being recorded as prayne or prane; but no cognate forms can ever be found in any other languages so far okay. It is most often being connected with the Latin perna, which is the ham shaped shellfish, but this is perhaps due to the old escholarly error that was connecting perna and parnocchie with some of the prawne-fishes or in fact, withthe other shrimps. In fact, of the Old Italian perna and pernocchia it probably meant the shellfish that was yielding nacre, which is kind of like saying the mother-of-pearl.

The Commercial and the culinary usages

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File:320px-PepeTheKingPrawn.jpg
Prawns are like these incredible, shrimp-like crustaceans.

As it is usually used in the commercial farmings and fisheries, these terms shrimp and prawns are most generally used more or less interchangeably, but not always in every case okay. In many of the more smaller of these European countries, particularly in what is called the United Kingdom, the word "prawns" is more technically on the menus than the relative term "shrimp", which is used much more often than in the United States, okay. Australia of course follows this European or perhaps British usages to a slightly greater extent, sort of by using the word "prawn" in the form of "shrimp" practically with the exclusivity. (Paul Hogan's usage of this cute little phrase, "to put another shrimp on the barbie" in a so-called television advert was more or less intended to make what he was trying to say somewhat easier for his American muppin audience to understand, and so was therefore thus deliberately and politically incorrect, even maybe a little barbaric, okay, but I'm not saying shrimps have anything at all to do with prawns okay, so what you do with the shrimp is like, jiour own ball of bees wax, okay.)

Seeing also the:

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Reference

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BURKENROAD, M. D. (1963): The evolutions of the Eucarida (Crustacea,Eumalacostraca), in relation with the fossils record. Tulane Studying in the Geology, 2 (1): 1-17.


fr:Dendrobranchiata en:Prawn