Mesaĝoj: 7
Lingvo: English
Sylver (Montri la profilon) 2015-septembro-09 17:25:26
I've come across 'trivita' and eluzi or eluzita, or even maybe "montris signojn de lacxigo" but not sure of the correct context/use for these.
jefusan (Montri la profilon) 2015-septembro-09 19:02:06
Sylver:I'm trying to translate some text, and there is a lot of talk about things being worn down. From my searching, it seems there might be several ways of saying it, but I don't know which, if any, are correct.Can you give an example from the English? Are they talking about something being physically worn down, or metaphorically?
I've come across 'trivita' and eluzi or eluzita, or even maybe "montris signojn de lacxigo" but not sure of the correct context/use for these.
Sylver (Montri la profilon) 2015-septembro-09 20:28:36
Then I also ran across one that might be more fitting? Senfortigxi?
erinja (Montri la profilon) 2015-septembro-09 20:38:16
PIV offers "erodi" as an option as well, which would work really well because it is feet that are wearing away at the surface.
pobotay (Montri la profilon) 2015-septembro-09 21:02:49
"Li miris, ke miksantaj piedoj povis erodi solidan ŝtalon"
erinja (Montri la profilon) 2015-septembro-09 21:48:11
Wells has "sin treni" as a translation for shuffle (in the meaning that has nothing to do with mixing).
You could possibly say "Li miris ke la sin-trenantaj piedoj povis erodi solidan sxtalon"
sudanglo (Montri la profilon) 2015-septembro-10 11:14:11
So for the wearing down of steel by the passage of feet, perhaps forfroti or erodi.
I see that Esperanto has another word (erozio) for the sort of erosion that occurs in nature from chemical action and battering by the weather.