Meldinger: 18
Språk: English
T0dd (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 15 14:04:50
To get the ball rolling, I offer this sentence that I just heard:
"I'm tired of you hanging around my desk."
Take a shot at it!
nw2394 (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 15 16:07:43
T0dd:"I'm tired of you hanging around my desk."How about something simple:
Take a shot at it!
Mi ne ŝatas ke vi estas apud mia skribtablo.
I do not like that you are beside my desk.
It loses the pithy "p::s off" aspect, though. Perhaps this is better:
Via ĉeesto ĉe mia skribtablo estas abomena.
Your presence at my desk is abominable (loathsome).
Nick
Frankouche (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 15 21:27:16
This is what i understand:
- mi ne sxatas ke vi turnas cirkaux min
- vi lacigas (tedas) min turnante cirkaux min
- ja vi (estas) vere laciganta, turnante sen scii kiofari.
- vi ektedas min ege, al kaj el iri (pri ja viaj iroj kaj reiroj).
awake (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 15 22:50:47
Via proksimecado al mia laborspaco agacas min.
Your continued-nearness to my work space is agravating me.
I made up proksim,ec,ad,o, but it seems to fit
Michael
T0dd:I thought it might be fun to take some sentences of idiomatic English and see how we might translate them into Esperanto. It's a way to get ideas from each other about how to express ourselves.
To get the ball rolling, I offer this sentence that I just heard:
"I'm tired of you hanging around my desk."
Take a shot at it!
pastorant (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 15 23:48:50
awake:I'll take a whack at it.I LOVE that word, and I understood it perfectly!
Via proksimecado al mia laborspaco agacas min.
How about this though:
Via proksimecado al mia laborspaco ĝenas min.
I like the word ĝeni.
Ja sufiĉe nete!
T0dd (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 16 02:25:14
"Proksimecado" is a nice touch.
pastorant (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 16 03:30:52
erinja (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 16 03:58:25
pastorant:How about "pasumi" for hang out?How about "ĉirkaŭumi" for "hang out"? Or simply "apudumi". I find -um- to be really useful for some of these idiomatic expressions.
Incidentally though, I think the pendulum has swung the other way for my personal Esperanto usage. My boyfriend and I share three languages, to one degree or another (English, Italian, Esperanto). We speak in Esperanto together, but since his English is quite good, and my Italian is... well... ok, middle school reading level, we tend to pull in words and expressions from those languages, as a joke, for amusement. Thus, "Huuu, kio stinkas?" (What stinks??), "Jeĥ ĝi sporkigis min!" (Yuck, it got me dirty! sporco = dirty, in Italian), "Kio estas viaj kie-prioj?" (translate highly literally and take a guess!), "Vi ridigas la kokojn" (= You make the chickens laugh; this is an Italian idiom used to tell someone that the joke they have just made is really lame).
And I'll finish off with a little 'world of literal translations in Esperantujo' anecdote. This is what happened, as nearly as I can remember it; apologies to the parties concerned if I mess up some details. A couple of extremely fluent Esperanto speakers were visiting the US for the first time, and I was showing them around Boston for the day. One of them was highly amused by the fact that public bathrooms are nearly always labelled as "Restrooms" here. So when he needed to stop at one, he didn't say "Mi bezonas necesejon" ("I need a bathroom/toilet"), he said "Mi devas ripozi" or "Mi iras ripozi" ("I need to rest"/ "I'm going to rest"). Or "Ĉu estas ripozejo proksime?" ("Is there a rest-place nearby?"). Anyway. The point is that once you speak Esperanto quite well, literal translations can be exploited for comedic effect and this can be a great source of fun between you and your friends.
seraphim (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 17 21:54:25
--Richard
http://varbejo.blogspot.com
p.s. If you're bent out of shape, don't get on my case. ========================
nw2394 (Å vise profilen) 2006 12 17 23:21:35
I thought he had a yellow streak.
Mi pensis ke li havis timemon.
Now everyone knows he has no guts.
Nun ĉiu scias ke li ne estas kuraĝa.
I'm tickled pink.
Mi ĝojegas.
If you're bent out of shape, don't get on my case.
Frankly I don't know where to start with this one though. It doesn't help that "bent out of shape" isn't really familiar, but "get on my case" isn't easy anyway.
Nick