Към съдържанието

TWO Scrambled Eggs

от jkph00, 14 март 2016

Съобщения: 20

Език: English

Alkanadi (Покажи профила) 16 март 2016, 15:42:30

Kirilo81:
Alkanadi:Does this work?
Mi volas du ovojn, kiuj estas kirlitaj.
Yes, of course, but why so complicated?
How about this then:
Mi volas du kirlitajn ovojn

Did someone already suggest that. I hope I am not repeating what someone else already said.

Alkanadi (Покажи профила) 16 март 2016, 15:43:37

Actually, I have a better solution for you. Just order pancakes instead.

robbkvasnak (Покажи профила) 16 март 2016, 16:08:30

Bv kirli por mi du ovojn!

Kirilo81 (Покажи профила) 16 март 2016, 16:27:33

Alkanadi:How about this then:
Mi volas du kirlitajn ovojn

Did someone already suggest that. I hope I am not repeating what someone else already said.
Have a look at the first comment and mine you've just cited. okulumo.gif
Seems to be the simplest solution.

Alkanadi:Actually, I have a better solution for you. Just order pancakes instead.
I'm a vegan anyway. lango.gif

Kristal (Покажи профила) 16 март 2016, 17:45:44

Would it work to say:
Bonvolu, du ovojn, kirlitajn.

Vestitor (Покажи профила) 16 март 2016, 17:56:44

Kristal:Would it work to say:
Bonvolu, du ovojn, kirlitajn.
Marvellous, the simplest way is often the best way.

eshapard (Покажи профила) 16 март 2016, 20:22:25

Kristal:Would it work to say:
Bonvolu, du ovojn, kirlitajn.
Seems intuitive to English speakers... two scrambled eggs vs two eggs, scrambled.

I'm not sure it would come across that way for everyone; especially speakers of languages where the adjective usually comes after the noun. Or languages that don't really have a fixed word order.

I think the problem here may be that 'scrambled eggs' is ambiguous in English. Are we talking about the dish, or the eggs?

Esperanto has a separate word for the dish as opposed to the egg: 'kirlovaĵo'. Think of it as dish-of-scrambled-egg.
  • du ovojn kirlitajn. - two scrambled eggs (two eggs)
  • du kirlovaĵojn - two dishes-of-scrambled-egg (two dishes)
Perhaps we're projecting a problem onto Esperanto that isn't really there.

Vestitor (Покажи профила) 17 март 2016, 00:44:46

Is it ambiguous in English? I don't think it is. Scrambled eggs is just the dish, made of eggs...which are 'scrambled'. In what other way could eggs be 'scrambled' without the result being that dish?

As far as I'm concerned there is no 'correct' number of eggs in scrambled eggs so people would either specify how many they want if they want a specific number.

Not everything in normal communication is encapsulated in self-contained, all-explanatory sentences. It usually goes something like this:

- Do you want scrambled eggs for breakfast?
- Yes thanks, but only two eggs.

Can I have scrambled eggs please?
- yes sir.
- How many eggs do you use?
- Three normally.
- Oh, I only want two.

nornen (Покажи профила) 17 март 2016, 03:56:07

Vestitor:It usually goes something like this:
Ha, this is funny! Talking about linguistic idiosyncrasies. In Spanish (or at least in Guatemalan) the order is the other way round: First you specify the number of eggs and then the preparation. So your example dialogues would go like this:

- ¿Quiere desayunar huevos? (Do you want eggs for breakfast?)
= Sí, porfa. Dos. (Yes, please. Two.)
- ¿Cómo los quiere? (How do you want them?)
- Revueltos. (Scrambled.) [Fritos, rancheros, duros, tibios,...]

- ¿Me regala huevos, porfa? (Can I have eggs, please)
= Con gusto. ¿Cuántos? (Yes, sir. How many?)
- Dos están bien. (Two are OK.)
= ¿Cómo los quiere? (How do you want them?)
- Revueltos. (Scrambled.) [Fritos, rancheros, duros, tibios,...]

Which also validates your point, that in a real life situation the explanation is self-contained.

eshapard (Покажи профила) 19 март 2016, 06:44:15

Where I'm from, if you order two scrambled eggs, that's one dish of two eggs... Unless there are two people at your table. Then maybe you mean two orders of scrambled eggs. Same words, different meaning.

The two can be the number of eggs or the number of dishes.

Context usually makes it clear to your waiter what you mean, but you can bet he writes down something unambiguous for the kitchen staff.

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