Couple of beginner's questions
de daz7887, 22 de agosto de 2016
Aportes: 16
Idioma: English
daz7887 (Mostrar perfil) 28 de agosto de 2016 03:45:18
Se ha ocultado el mensaje.
Fenris_kcf (Mostrar perfil) 28 de agosto de 2016 07:56:36
sudanglo:Of course it is easy enough to make the distinction by suitable re-phrasing or adding a preposition, but nevertheless I sometimes think that it would be nice to have a separate word for share as not everything that can be shared is divisible, and sharing may not imply division.I believe i already told, that the English word "share" originates from the Proto Germanic word "skeraną", which is also the source for the English word "shear". So actually "share" didn't mean to have something together without divison. English just imported the Latin word "divide" and "share" lost the meaning of division. Therefore: No need to pretend that English does it "the right way".
And in Esperanto you can just use "kunhavi" in the sence of a non-dividing sharing.
opalo (Mostrar perfil) 28 de agosto de 2016 11:16:37
- Ankoraŭ refers to continuation, steadiness of state, a sense that more is to come.
- Jam refers to change, volatility or readiness to change, a sense of being overtaken by events.
Both "Have you done it yet?" and "Have you already done it?" could be candidates for the use of jam. However, in the first question, you are expecting the action to have been completed, while in the second, you are not. To express the nuances clearly, I would suggest Vi faris ĝin, ĉu ne? for the first, and Ĉu vi faris ĝin tiel frue? for the second.
Are you getting ready yet? — simply Ĉu vi pretiĝas? or Vi pretiĝas, ĉu ne?
Are you already getting ready? — Ĉu vi pretiĝas tiel frue?
sudanglo (Mostrar perfil) 28 de agosto de 2016 12:09:23
Facial expression, tone of voice, context etc may distinguish.
For the expression of surprise perhaps you could say - Ĉu vi jam nun pretiĝas?
And when you suspect that someone has still not started getting reading - Ĉu vi ankoraŭ ne komencis pretiĝi?
Vestitor (Mostrar perfil) 28 de agosto de 2016 16:22:25
sudanglo:but nevertheless I sometimes think that it would be nice to have a separate word for share as not everything that can be shared is divisible, and sharing may not imply division.I happened to be writing something for a Wikipedia entry today and got a bit stuck over several iterations of 'share' (user-share/market-share and shared resources), but after some thinking I realised that they do actually all imply division, it's just that in the cases where the 'object' is not necessarily physically divided, it is the time or usage or space occupied which is divided.
I somewhat agree with what Fenris wrote above, except that I don't think kunhavi is actually a completely accurate description of what is happening in something like 'market-share' where competing entities are occupying a central arena, rather than collaborating in it, or both "having" it (the whole thing) together. It is divided.
None of this illuminated the word choices I needed.
daz7887 (Mostrar perfil) 29 de agosto de 2016 07:01:59