Сообщений: 29
Язык: English
pdenisowski (Показать профиль) 21 сентября 2013 г., 22:02:40
noelekim (Показать профиль) 22 сентября 2013 г., 3:15:05
noelekim (Показать профиль) 22 сентября 2013 г., 5:06:06
NJ Esperantist:I'm have difficulty translating the term 'low power' from English into Esperanto. To explain how I mean this, let's say you are on a spaceship that is on low power. The lights might be dim, or maybe only every third one is lit. Only some of the systems work. Let's assume that the ship is not run on electricity.You could say that the ship "funkcias per reduktita povo" (is operating on reduced power) or "funkcias per malalta energikonsumo" (is operating in low-energy mode).
How would you generically express in Esperanto that the ship is on low power?
sudanglo (Показать профиль) 22 сентября 2013 г., 8:54:27
The semantic coverage of words gets extended and I see no good reason not to extend 'modo' to the sense of operating mode (cf English, French, Spanish, Hungarian Turkish etc).
In practice, the possibility of confusion in context with the fashion sense (style of dressing) seems extremely unlikely.
Edit: the basic sense of the word in languages that have cognates of 'modo' may well be fashion in its broader sense and Fashion (capital F) may be derivative.
Ondo (Показать профиль) 22 сентября 2013 г., 19:01:57
sudanglo:The use of krizo-kazaj lumoj is particularly interesting since if you were to go by PIV's definitions of 'kazo' this would not be strictly pukka.Just forget the hyphen and, voilà, strictly pukka!
Having written something about physics (in E) I'm convinced povumo is better than povo for the physical quantity "energio dividita per tempo". This doesn't mean we should always translate power = povumo. Povo, potenco, elektro, energio... could be better in many contexts.
"Reĝimo" is certainly correct and I would recommend using it. I think modo = "mode (all meanings)" is still something to compare with standardo = "standard" and kontroli = "control", but things might change.
RiotNrrd (Показать профиль) 22 сентября 2013 г., 21:51:58
noelekim:You could say that the ship "funkcias per reduktita povo" (is operating on reduced power) or "funkcias per malalta energikonsumo" (is operating in low-energy mode).Maybe something like funkcias potencete/povete/elektrete/(ktp-ete).?
In the same vein, poveta lumigo (or some other derivation in the same manner as before) might work for emergency light. It's not a literal translation, but I think more or less covers the same territory.
You know. Kinda.
sudanglo (Показать профиль) 23 сентября 2013 г., 10:37:58
Unfortunately in the absence of commercial activity in Esperanto and such leaflets, it is more difficult to decide whether reĝimo or modo is more established in usage.
Ondo: touché. We would have to ask noelekim whether he had in mind kriz-okaza or krizo-kaza.
Edit: I did find a hit for ŝpar-reĝimo in the Tekstaro.
la partio de Blair rigore daŭrigis la fiskan ŝpar-reĝimon de la venkitaj konservativuloj
What would we say for 'standby mode' eg for a TV set?
noelekim (Показать профиль) 24 сентября 2013 г., 4:11:18
sudanglo: Ondo: touché. We would have to ask noelekim whether he had in mind kriz-okaza or krizo-kaza.It never occurred to me until the point was raised that krizokaza could be understood as "krizo-kaza" instead of "kriz-okaza" (for when an emergency occurs) as the authors of the articles certainly intended.
The word can be hyphenated - kriz-okaza - to avoid the ambiguity, but judging by a Google search, hardly anyone seems to have thought that necessary.
noelekim (Показать профиль) 24 сентября 2013 г., 6:22:53
sudanglo:In ES and PT, modo de espera, which I translate as atendostato.
What would we say for 'standby mode' eg for a TV set?