<div dir="ltr">Well, actually, the mango suggestion was made originally as a tree, not a fruit - as the tree Freire learned to read underneath. Obviously the concept of "learning under a tree" exists in many cultures around the world, and there are several trees that would work for this:<br>
<br>apple (newton), bodhi/banyan/fig/pipal/<i><b><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashvastha" title="Ashvastha">Ashvastha</a></b></i> (buddha), juniper (navajo), buttonwood (wall street), "blossoming pear" (african-american - from "their eyes were watching god"), mulberry (china/silk), baobab, <a href="http://www.thorntreeproject.org/">thorn tree</a>....<br>
<br>I definitely sympathize with the "general fruit" and "alphabetical is nice" threads here. Verbs are good too. And the above list, even if we managed to triple it, would still be a little too thin to make such wordplay easy. But even if we decide against a list like the above, I would still advocate for starting with mango, and then going alphabetical later (as Ubuntu did). The Freire story is a good one, and mango is such a fun word to say.<br>
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