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Difference between "de" and "el"

de vikungen, 30 de noviembre de 2014

Aportes: 9

Idioma: English

vikungen (Mostrar perfil) 30 de noviembre de 2014 20:43:03

Can anyone here explain to me the difference between the prepositions "de" and "el"?
They both seem to mean the equivalent of the English word "of" in different meanings, and I see them used interchangeable a lot.

nornen (Mostrar perfil) 30 de noviembre de 2014 21:27:43

"de" is "of, from": it can be used for possessions (la rozo de Teodoro), relations (la bazo de la problemo) or the origin of movement (mi venas de la avo).
"el" is "out of, from the inside out, taken from a set": Mi falis el la fenestro. Unu el ili min batis.
"da" is "of" with quantities and measures: kvar metroj da tiu ĉi ŝtofo.

vikungen (Mostrar perfil) 30 de noviembre de 2014 23:33:01

Thank you! But I have also seen "el" used in this way: "Sep por la gnomoj en salonoj el ŝton'."

While other times again I will see "Mi frapas al pordo de ŝtono."

Can both be used when describing what something is made of?

Also:
- Saluton de Norvegio
- Saluton el Norvegio

I have seen both of these used. The difference between these two prepositions seem to boggle the minds of many people, not just me.

nornen (Mostrar perfil) 1 de diciembre de 2014 00:30:00

vikungen:Thank you! But I have also seen "el" used in this way: "Sep por la gnomoj en salonoj el ŝton'."

While other times again I will see "Mi frapas al pordo de ŝtono."

Can both be used when describing what something is made of?

Also:
- Saluton de Norvegio
- Saluton el Norvegio

I have seen both of these used. The difference between these two prepositions seem to boggle the minds of many people, not just me.
To me, all options sound fine.
"salonoj el sxton" = halls hewn out of the stone. In this meaning "el" is quite common with materials.
"salonoj de ston" = halls of stone

"salutoj de/el Norvegio" are synonym to me.

dombola (Mostrar perfil) 1 de diciembre de 2014 03:12:07

vikungen:Can anyone here explain to me the difference between the prepositions "de" and "el"?
They both seem to mean the equivalent of the English word "of" in different meanings, and I see them used interchangeable a lot.
Perhaps the book "The Esperanto Teacher" can help a little:

El means out of. It applies

(i.) to place, signifying motion from, as, Mi eliris el la domo, I went out of the
house.
(ii.). Chosen from among, as, Unu el miaj infanoj, One of (from among) my children.
(iii.). Made out of, as, Tiu ĉi ŝtofo estas farita el lano, This cloth is made (out) of wool.

El is used as a prefix, and means out,
outright, or thoroughly, as, Elfosi, to dig out; Ellerni, to learn thoroughly.

De means of, from, or by; it denotes

(i.) possession, as La ĉapelo de la patro, The father's hat;
(ii.), the agent of an action, as La letero estis skribata de Johano, The letter was written by John;
(iii.), cause, Li mortis de febro, He died of fever;
(iv.), starting point, from, since, as De tiu tempo neniu lin vidis, (Starting) from
(since) that time nobody has seen him; Li venis de Parizo, He came from Paris.

BoriQa (Mostrar perfil) 1 de diciembre de 2014 05:15:19

vikungen:- Saluton de Norvegio
- Saluton el Norvegio

I have seen both of these used. The difference between these two prepositions seem to boggle the minds of many people, not just me.
The first one (de), Norway, the country itself (as a whole) is sending you greetings.

In the second one (el), someone in Norway is sending you greetings.

sergejm (Mostrar perfil) 1 de diciembre de 2014 05:31:13

El/de Norvegio - this is similar to use of "на/в Украине" - "on/in Ukraine" in Russian. They say that Ukraine is independent state now and they shold use "в (in)" instead of traditional "на (on)".
"El (out of)" is pair to "en (in)", "de (from)" is pair to "sur (on)".
So "El Norvegio" may be "Out of Norway as state", and "De Norvegio" is "From Norway as land".
About "salonoj el ŝton'", "pordo de ŝtono" - you can say "ŝtonaj salonoj", "ŝtona pordo" and don't think which preposition is better.

marbuljon (Mostrar perfil) 2 de diciembre de 2014 05:55:12

Hey, you live in Norway, so this is actually very easy!

de = av (efter, but only when denoting ownership)
el = ur; ut ur

kom ut ur garderoben = el
pengar ur norsk oljefond = el
en bok av/efter Tove Jansson = de
jag fick pennan av Pelle = de

the only difference is sometimes we use it where it's not needed in esperanto
"empty out the bathtub" = "make-empty the tub"
(like "kan du tömma ur badkaret?".)

vikungen (Mostrar perfil) 2 de diciembre de 2014 13:26:47

Thanks for all the excellent responses, hopefully everyone who wonders about this will understand the difference now, including me! ridulo.gif

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