Whats New this week on Ancestry?

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(remember to subscribe to be among the first to know when the part two video when it is released!)
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Thanks, Larry! Always appreciate your videos!

Downeastwaves
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Actually in Southern Missouri the town is New Mad-Drid, but of course there are also people in my state that want to pronounce it as Missour-ah. It's all good. Thanks for the great video, Larry.

KAT-KIT
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The best thing I learned from this video is to add my email when I message someone.

cecelialiposky
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Thx for the info about the responses. .I was wondering why responses were so low

aquilaclark
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Thank you so much for all your helpful videos. I am trying to track down my husband's great great grandparents of BOTH his great grandfather & grandmother who ran away from home to marry & were disowned. He and our daughter did a dna test on ancestry which has given us a Mystery group (color coded light green). The highest cM is matches are 217 & 204 (siblings) which have good trees, but I still can't figure it out. At 217/204 cM, how many generations back should I be looking at? I know I am on the right path as they are from the exact same county in New York as my husband's great grandparents are. Any help would be GREATLY appreciated.
Becca

PieceByPiece
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I don’t have the far right column, how do I get that?

susangordon
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So Madrid is pronounced with a long a sound instead of a short a? Must be a midwest thing because we say it here in Nebraska just like you do; Ma (like ma for our mother) - drid. Not Ma (like the month of May) - drid.

MerryLucious
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The -shire at end of English county names rhymes with fur. But you still need to beware of some of them: Leicestershire sounds like Lestershur. Gloucestershire sounds like Glostershur The way you said 'Wales' was fine...but God help you with Welsh town names LOL.

frankhooper
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Sorry, baby, but it's still wrong. MAD rid.

roxismith