Can adverbs be overused?
de apok2, 20 juin 2013
Messages : 25
Langue: English
novialingue (Voir le profil) 23 juin 2013 12:13:25
apok2:How in the world do you express "trying to get to heaven." Ĉielo is the word for both sky and heaven, but doesn't seem to fit in this situation.I can't see why ĉielo wouldn't be appropriate. It apparently derives from It. "cielo", or Fr. "ciel", which are used for both heaven and sky (cf. also Lat. "caelum", from which both derive). Also, think of the Esperanto version of the Lord's Prayer: estu volo Via, kiel en la ĉielo, tiel ankaŭ sur la tero.
yyaann (Voir le profil) 23 juin 2013 13:04:57
novialingue:Agreed. "Iri al la ĉielo" or "Iri ĉielen" are common usage. Maybe you could make the "ĉ" uppercase if clarity is a concern. I can understand the reluctance to use a word whose semantic field is somewhat larger than the original English, but in a religious context the sentence is immediately understood. Plus, I can hardly imagine any other contexts in which the phrase could be used, except perhaps if you're talking about an aircraft. And even that would seem a little far-fetched as the vehicule is not so much going to the sky, as it is flying through it.apok2:How in the world do you express "trying to get to heaven." Ĉielo is the word for both sky and heaven, but doesn't seem to fit in this situation.I can't see why ĉielo wouldn't be appropriate. The French noun from which it apparently derives, "ciel", is used for both heaven and sky. Think of the Esperanto version of the Lord's Prayer: estu volo Via, kiel en la ĉielo, tiel ankaŭ sur la tero.
"Se vi estas kristano, vi ne estas civitano de tiu ĉi mondo kiu penas atingi la regno de Dio; anstataŭe vi estas civitano de tiu ĉiela regno, vojaĝanta tra tiu ĉi mondo."The sentence is missing an "n" at the end of "atingi la regnon" but is otherwise fine as it is.
erinja (Voir le profil) 23 juin 2013 13:23:44
But in general "ĉielo" is used for both sky and heaven with no confusion. It's a little weird at first as an English speaker, to encounter Esperanto words that have a single word for what we English speakers think of as two totally different words, but you get used to it eventually and context tells you the meaning.
Another one is "zorgi", which can mean both "worry" and "care". "ĝardeno" is both a garden and the yard of a house (this matches British usage, which says "garden" for what we'd call a yard in America).
apok2 (Voir le profil) 23 juin 2013 14:02:56
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sudanglo (Voir le profil) 23 juin 2013 18:12:45
"ĝardeno" is both a garden and the yard of a house (this matches British usage, which says "garden" for what we'd call a yard in America).In my English a yard is distinguished from a garden. Things have to grow in a garden, or at least have the potential to grow, ie there must be soil. But a concreted-over or barren area can be a yard.
Yard: chiefly British, a piece of uncultivated ground adjoining a building, typically one enclosed by walls or other buildings: tiny houses with the lavatory in the yard
sudanglo (Voir le profil) 23 juin 2013 18:45:40
I like the Esperanto language but, contrary to what many of you seem to think, Esperanto is NOT an easy languageA valid point.
But it all depends on your basis for comparison.
Comparing one's progress in Esperanto with that in a foreign national language (learnt in adulthood), Esperanto looks easy.
But achieving a command of Esperanto comparable to the command of one's Mother tongue is decidedly not easy.
But then, is this a reasonable goal, even for a finvenkisto?
I suspect not. Good enough is all that is reasonably required.
This is why machine translation is such a threat to Esperanto, and also why the world is happy to (currently) communicate internationally in mangled English.
It has probably never been true of any Lingua Franca throughout history that the users were that proficient in it (compared to their competence in any language learnt from birth).
At least, one can say that any speaker's poor Esperanto is likely to be much better than that of any foreigner's poor English.
robbkvasnak (Voir le profil) 23 juin 2013 18:49:03
I do not profess to professor you. To the contrary - that is what egged my students the most at the university - I said you guys grade each other! This is a democracy. I am just the pointer-outer - what my colleagues call a "facilitator" though I think that many of my comments sort of "malfaciligas" since I hope to make people (and myself) think. It's Socratic teaching where I play the devil's advocate but sometimes also the devil. There is nothing as mojosa as a thinking brain. Get that hipocampus moving! Rev up the Wernicke's region and connect to Broca!
I like your multi-adverbial sentence as well as the other varieties - that is what literature is about - that is why the humanities are necessary - how do we connect to reality with this thing called brain and its mystical counterpart called mind? The Buddha said: "The mind is not disturbed by things as they occur, that remains pure and tranquil under all circumstances, is the true mind and should be the master." So right now I am looking for my mind - I guess you could say that I have lost my mind but am conscious of it - I am not out of my mind, it is out of me. Hugs and a pat on the back. Keep asking and ponder, keep wondering and wonder. I often sit for hours watching my two turltes Ludoviĉjo and Lidinjo searching my face for clues as to who I am and me looking back trying to imagine what they see and what they are thinking in their pond on the mossy log.
pdenisowski (Voir le profil) 23 juin 2013 20:59:08
erinja:But in general "ĉielo" is used for both sky and heaven with no confusion. It's a little weird at first as an English speaker, to encounter Esperanto words that have a single word for what we English speakers think of as two totally different words, but you get used to it eventually and context tells you the meaning.Many languages use the same words for "sky" and "heaven" : German (Himmel), Dutch (hemel), French (ciel), Spanish/Italian (cielo), Latin (caelum), Polish (niebo), Russian (небо), Vietnamese (trời), etc.
One of the things I like the most about studying languages is that it forces you to think differently (note the adverb ...
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Amike,
Paul
erinja (Voir le profil) 24 juin 2013 02:36:30
sudanglo:In America, if someone was concreted-over, it wouldn't normally be called a yard, at least not in my region. If it was bare earth perhaps it would still be called a yard, but it would be considered a pretty poor one!"ĝardeno" is both a garden and the yard of a house (this matches British usage, which says "garden" for what we'd call a yard in America).In my English a yard is distinguished from a garden. Things have to grow in a garden, or at least have the potential to grow, ie there must be soil. But a concreted-over or barren area can be a yard.
xdzt (Voir le profil) 25 juin 2013 09:17:48
sudanglo:In my English a yard is distinguished from a garden. Things have to grow in a garden, or at least have the potential to grow, ie there must be soil. But a concreted-over or barren area can be a yard.You overlook the point. In the US, a yard and a garden are both things you have at the back (or front) of your house in which stuff grows. However, a garden is explicitly a well-cultivated region with ornamental plants or maybe vegetables. A yard, by contrast, refers to the entire area and may include grass lawn, some trees, and even gardens.
Yard: chiefly British, a piece of uncultivated ground adjoining a building, typically one enclosed by walls or other buildings: tiny houses with the lavatory in the yard
In the UK, however, the one word 'garden' is used for both these meanings. One can be out back sitting in the garden, or one can also be planting a vegetable garden in Spring. The fact that 'yard' still has a meaning in British English isn't really relevant to the Esperanto-English comparison.
That said, as an aside, the British usage of yard is also used in the States occasionally. The term 'prison yard' comes to mind as an example.