Ku rupapuro rw'ibirimwo

Keep calm and Carry on :)

ca, kivuye

Ubutumwa 28

ururimi: English

sudanglo (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Nyandagaro 2011 09:12:59

Ne perturbiĝu kaj tenu firme la vojon.

Restu trankvila kaj fosu vian sulkon.

tommjames (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Nyandagaro 2011 09:51:03

novmik:Some other posters are trying to make this into something else.
Actually that's what you're doing. The "carry on" is fairly unambiguous here, it just means "continue doing whatever you were doing". To be honest I'm not convinced that any special insight into British culture is a prerequisite for being able to work this one out.

novmik:In this case, I will have to trust the dictionary
Feel free to do that; the dictionary is of course correct. Be aware however that to persist, in the sense of the word "daŭri", is not the sense of "carry on" in the phrase we're translating. If you don't want to accept that, for whatever reason, then fine, but please let's not pretend this is a matter of dictionary correctness.

If you take the time to run that query I gave you through Tekstaro, which shows daŭrigi being used without an object, I'm sure you will see that it is the right verb to use.

ceigered (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Nyandagaro 2011 10:50:04

Thanks to this thread I've forgotten what carry on even means! lango.gif

Surely it was about carrying an object whilst being on top of another, no?

mnlg (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Nyandagaro 2011 11:01:47

I thought it meant "carry [your duties] on [you]", as in, keep carrying your weigh on your shoulders ridulo.gif

According to this etymology dictionary, it means "continue to advance", which would strengthen the case for 'daŭrigi'.

ceigered (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Nyandagaro 2011 11:28:16

That seems like a fitting explanation mnlg rido.gif.

Anyway when I say the title I thought it meant "carry on" = continue whatever the heck you were doing before the implied interruptive occasion happened and stopped you halfway.

E.g. a policeman saying "Ok, carry on, nothing to see here, this man's just suffering from a whole in the head caused by an accidentally misplaced piece of smoldering lead, please ma'am, pick up your purse and carry on with your shuffling..." (or.. "Ok people, please remain calm, carry on" okulumo.gif)

But continue does seem to be one of its meanings (if not the original meaning, since "continue" could substitute for "carry on" in the previous sense).

Anyway, wiktionary does a better job of definitions.

I'd thus go with

1) daŭri(gi)?

2) porti en -n (porti en aeroplanon or whatever we call flying machines in EO) (enporteblaj = carry-ons?)

3) daŭrigi

4) agegi?

5) --? Never heard of this meaning before.

---

Problems with phrases like this is that they're so subliminal to the English speaker's mind that I can't remember all the cases I would use such a phrase rido.gif

3rdblade (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 2 Nyandagaro 2011 11:46:26

Thinking about this, I realised the 'carry' connotes 'a burden', so it's not so much 'keep moving onward', as 'keep working hard', too, as mnlg observed. I had nevre thought about it at all before, though!

kierenml (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 5 Nyandagaro 2011 19:56:09

Saluton!

Sorry for the delay, I was at sea!

The poster was an old World War 2 poster, the saying meaning "Carry on no matter what happens". The poster was to get across the "Stiff upper lipness" of the (or more then) English culture.

By the way, I am new to esperanto and lernu.net.... Thanks for all your amazing help and welcome!

Kieren

RiotNrrd (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 6 Nyandagaro 2011 04:22:50

"Carry on" is just a somewhat idiomatic phrase meaning "go about your business as usual".

Subira ku ntango