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Up and Down

de sudanglo, 28 aprilie 2015

Contribuții/Mesaje: 19

Limbă: English

sudanglo (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 09:02:27

If you want to put something on a door to indicate that it opens outwards or inwards, then you can do this economically with Tiru or Puŝu.

If you want to label a switch On and Off, then En kaj El

But what would you put on a lift button for Up and Down if space were limited.

Kirilo81 (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 09:09:08

sor - sob ridulo.gif

Alkanadi (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 09:44:20

Normal speed:
Up - Ascendu
Down - Deiru

Super fast:
Up - Raketu
Down - Falu

Bemused (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 11:45:44

sudanglo:
what would you put on a lift button for Up and Down if space were limited.
On Up button (upward pointing arrow)
On Down button (downward pointing arrow)
Why use words when symbols can present the information more concisely?

Simon_Gauvain (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 11:53:14

super - sub

Kirilo81:sor - sob
Not everybody knows these words...

Alkanadi:Down - Deiru
You can "deiri" from somewhere even if you are going up...

Bemused:Why use words when symbols can present the information more concisely?
Why use lift when we can take the stairs? That isn't the question okulumo.gif

Tempodivalse (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 14:22:49

sudanglo:If you want to put something on a door to indicate that it opens outwards or inwards, then you can do this economically with Tiru or Puŝu.
In Russian, doors will say на себя (al vi) and от себя (de vi).
But what would you put on a lift button for Up and Down if space were limited.
My first reaction: supren - teren or supren - suben.

Simon_Gauvain (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 14:56:45

Tempodivalse:supren - suben
Agreed. I actually thought to it too but it seems a little too long according to the limited-space condition.

nornen (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 15:11:58

Tempodivalse:
sudanglo:If you want to put something on a door to indicate that it opens outwards or inwards, then you can do this economically with Tiru or Puŝu.
In Russian, doors will say на себя (al vi) and от себя (de vi).
Once again I am impressed by how differently two languages express a very basic concept.
In English you describe the action you have to take to open the door, while in Russian you describe in which direction the door will move.

kaŝperanto (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 18:04:18

Simon_Gauvain:super - sub

Kirilo81:sor - sob
Not everybody knows these words...

Alkanadi:Down - Deiru
You can "deiri" from somewhere even if you are going up...

Bemused:Why use words when symbols can present the information more concisely?
Why use lift when we can take the stairs? That isn't the question okulumo.gif
My vote would be "sup" and "sub" if we are restricted to 3-4 letter descriptions, but the arrows seem more appropriate for me. Any elevator I've ever seen has two buttons with arrows, and may sometimes have text printed next to them. Sometimes the best solution is the answer to the question you didn't ask. okulumo.gif

Kirilo81 (Arată profil) 28 aprilie 2015, 19:58:43

Err, suben does not mean the same as malsupren. The latter is an absolute expression of vertical movement, while the former expresses a movement to a position below something mentioned before - the movement itself can have any direction, even upwards.
If I read "suben" at a lift I'd be afraid that pushing it would get me pulled below it...

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