Missatges: 10
Llengua: English
Bemused (Mostra el perfil) 23 de març de 2013 14.36.13
A player much more powerful than you threatens to destroy you.
You reply "Bring it on".
A direct translation to Esperanto would be meaningless.
So how to convey, in Esperanto, the same feeling of fearless disregard for the threat?
hebda999 (Mostra el perfil) 23 de març de 2013 17.06.23
Bemused:You are playing a war game."Simple komencu"
A player much more powerful than you threatens to destroy you.
You reply "Bring it on".
A direct translation to Esperanto would be meaningless.
So how to convey, in Esperanto, the same feeling of fearless disregard for the threat?
"Ataku"
"Montru kion vi kapablas"
...
J_Marc (Mostra el perfil) 24 de març de 2013 1.53.31
Venu do, sinjoro.
(Some kind soul with a copy of Hamlet on hand will no doubt tell us the original English expression that this derives from!)
fari_teon (Mostra el perfil) 28 de març de 2013 14.52.44
Although, maybe 'Mi kuraĝas vin' would work.
Simon Pure (Mostra el perfil) 28 de març de 2013 19.27.12
Simon Pure (Mostra el perfil) 28 de març de 2013 19.27.14
Tempodivalse (Mostra el perfil) 29 de març de 2013 2.23.07
Dakila_Sidhi (Mostra el perfil) 30 de març de 2013 5.00.39
sudanglo (Mostra el perfil) 30 de març de 2013 9.50.05
Two points should be noted however.
1. The Samideanoj are too genteel to be crudely pugnacious.
2. In Esperanto there are relatively few fixed parol-turnoj sanctioned by usage.
The latter point is the most important. One doesn't want to burden the language and create a distinction between spertaj Esperantistoj and komencantoj comparable to the native speaker/foreigner learner reality that exists for national languages.
jchthys (Mostra el perfil) 1 d’abril de 2013 12.34.58