Messaggi: 7
Lingua: English
Docxjo (Mostra il profilo) 11 febbraio 2010 07:37:01
La knabino altabligxis, rigardis cxirkauxen.
I can't find the definition for altabligxis in the PIV or any other dictionary.
Thanks!
KoLonJaNo (Mostra il profilo) 11 febbraio 2010 08:02:28
Docxjo:Can someone help me translate the following sentence from the book "Viktimoj" (Second Chapter):I guess you should read this as
La knabino altabligxis, rigardis cxirkauxen.
I can't find the definition for altabligxis in the PIV or any other dictionary.
Thanks!
al-tabl-iĝ-is
So the girl literally "got" (-iĝis) "to" (al-) a | the "table" (-tabl-).
I don't know the context of the story but I assume that means the girl moved towards a | the table and looked around.
Kolonjano
Docxjo (Mostra il profilo) 11 febbraio 2010 17:21:05
KoLonJaNo:Hello!Seems simple when you say it like that! Thank you!
Docxjo:Can someone help me translate the following sentence from the book "Viktimoj" (Second Chapter):I guess you should read this as
La knabino altabligxis, rigardis cxirkauxen.
I can't find the definition for altabligxis in the PIV or any other dictionary.
Thanks!
al-tabl-iĝ-is
So the girl literally "got" (-iĝis) "to" (al-) a | the "table" (-tabl-).
I don't know the context of the story but I assume that means the girl moved towards a | the table and looked around.
Kolonjano
erinja (Mostra il profilo) 11 febbraio 2010 19:47:19
In this case it was all three, al/tabl/iĝ.
Here are some examples of other cases where a preposition is used in a compound word:
el => eliri = el/iri, to go out or to exit
pri => prilabori = pri/labori, to work on [something]
sur => surmeti = sur/meti, to put on
en => enhavi = en/havi, to contain (lit. to have inside)
for => forlasi = for/lasi, to leave behind, to forsake, to desert
RiotNrrd (Mostra il profilo) 12 febbraio 2010 05:17:27
For example, take "kolego". It can mean either "colleague" or "big neck", depending on how you break it down*.
Some people point this out as an example of one of Esperanto's "flaws". It isn't a flaw, of course; most, if not all, languages contain homonyms. English is crammed with them, and we somehow get by. Things like "context" and "common sense" can be useful sometimes.
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* This isn't even the best example I've come across. It's just the only one I can remember at the moment. I once saw a long list of Esperanto homonyms, and some of them were pretty funny.
darkweasel (Mostra il profilo) 12 febbraio 2010 06:50:30
Alciona (Mostra il profilo) 12 febbraio 2010 06:55:55
darkweasel: List of double meanings in EsperantoThat is a wonderful and entertaining list, Darkweasel. Thank you for posting a link to it! It's going to amuse me for hours tonight.