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Skribo?

Bruso, 2012 m. birželis 27 d.

Žinutės: 5

Kalba: English

Bruso (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. birželis 27 d. 01:01:04

The "Enkonduko" of PMEG begins:

"Tiu ĉi verko ... celas ordinarajn Esperantistojn, kiuj volas studi la gramatikon, vortfaradon, skribon kaj elparolon del la Internacia Lingvo."

Skribo = writing. What does this mean in this context? Phonetic correspondance? Orthography? Penmanship?

xdzt (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. birželis 27 d. 01:17:33

Bruso:The "Enkonduko" of PMEG begins:

"Tiu ĉi verko ... celas ordinarajn Esperantistojn, kiuj volas studi la gramatikon, vortfaradon, skribon kaj elparolon del la Internacia Lingvo."

Skribo = writing. What does this mean in this context? Phonetic correspondance? Orthography? Penmanship?
I would assume composition.

Mustelvulpo (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. birželis 27 d. 12:36:28

Bruso:"Tiu ĉi verko ... celas ordinarajn Esperantistojn, kiuj volas studi la gramatikon, vortfaradon, skribon kaj elparolon del la Internacia Lingvo."

Skribo = writing. What does this mean in this context? Phonetic correspondance? Orthography? Penmanship?
Translating- "This work targets ordinary Esperantists who wish to study the grammar, word formation, writing and pronunciation of the International Language."

Most times you use "writing" as a noun in English, "skribo" would be an appropriate translation, (there could be others such as "skribado," "skribaĵo," "skribmaniero," etc.) whether you mean correspondence, orthography, penmanship, or the written characters themselves. The context of what you say will indicate what you mean.

Bruso (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. birželis 27 d. 13:35:03

Mustelvulpo:Translating- "This work targets ordinary Esperantists who wish to study the grammar, word formation, writing and pronunciation of the International Language."

Most times you use "writing" as a noun in English, "skribo" would be an appropriate translation, (there could be others such as "skribado," "skribaĵo," "skribmaniero," etc.) whether you mean correspondence, orthography, penmanship, or the written characters themselves. The context of what you say will indicate what you mean.
OK.

One of the reasons I asked the original question was that, if I had written that sentence myself, I would have been more specific than just "writing": orthography, composition, spelling, etc. (penmanship seemed unlikely). The literal translation just seemed vague.

erinja (Rodyti profilį) 2012 m. birželis 27 d. 23:51:52

Bruso:One of the reasons I asked the original question was that, if I had written that sentence myself, I would have been more specific than just "writing": orthography, composition, spelling, etc. (penmanship seemed unlikely). The literal translation just seemed vague.
The vagueness works well, in my opinion.

If I said to you that I can read, write, and speak Esperanto, you would assume that "write" includes proper use of grammar, orthography, etc. -- everything having to do with writing.

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