Cucumis - Ilmainen käännöspalvelu
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Käännös - You are very tiresome, man! (Englanti)

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21 Heinäkuu 2008 18:46  

lakil
Viestien lukumäärä: 249
..But I feel bad to delete you!...
 

21 Heinäkuu 2008 18:53  

pyana
Viestien lukumäärä: 29
Agree with lakil.
And maybe.."You are soooo ugly"
 

21 Heinäkuu 2008 19:13  

lakil
Viestien lukumäärä: 249
Thank you pyana. ...so ugly or very ugly works the same...it conveys the meaning..
 

21 Heinäkuu 2008 19:18  

pyana
Viestien lukumäärä: 29
You are right lakil, it does
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 05:04  

kafetzou
Viestien lukumäärä: 7963
There's no "but" or "and" in the Greek version.
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 05:05  

kafetzou
Viestien lukumäärä: 7963
Are we sure that this is about deleting somebody and not about squashing a bug or something?
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 09:19  

Mideia
Viestien lukumäärä: 949
Yep,we're sure, seens to me that sb wants to delete a person from a list
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 11:16  

imogilnitskaya
Viestien lukumäärä: 84
I translated from Serbian, not from Greek, it was about deleting in the serbian version.
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 13:16  

Mideia
Viestien lukumäärä: 949
From the greek one is: How boring you're man! It's a shame to delete you! You're veeery clunch!
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 14:15  

reggina
Viestien lukumäärä: 302
In this context i prefer the word boring-and i don't like the word ugly either.
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 15:17  

imogilnitskaya
Viestien lukumäärä: 84
You don`t like ugly, but what do you suggest instead of?
Tiresome and boring are synonyms http://www.thefreedictionary.com/tiresome
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 17:28  

kafetzou
Viestien lukumäärä: 7963
There's nothing wrong with "tiresome", and "very" is the same as "so". I've never heard of "clunch", mideia, and I'd rather work with this version, since it was done directly from the Serbian. The Greek version may be wrong.

English correction:

I feel bad to delete you --> I feel bad about deleting you

But now the whole thing doesn't make sense in English. If she says she feels bad about deleting the other person, it means she feels sorry, but then she says, "You are very ugly", which certainly doesn't sound like someone who feels sorry, so I'm wondering if "feel bad" is the right phrase.
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 17:34  

kafetzou
Viestien lukumäärä: 7963
Could someone please tell us what "a" means and what "zao mi" means? Also, are there several possibilities for "ruzan"?
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 17:35  

kafetzou
Viestien lukumäärä: 7963
Sorry, I forgot to cc the Serbian experts.

CC: reggina Roller-Coaster Cinderella
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 19:02  

imogilnitskaya
Viestien lukumäärä: 84
"A" may mean "and", may mean "but", depands.

"Zao mi je" is I am sorry. But there is some irony in that "i am sorry". Probably this is "I am sorry" to delete you,cause you are so tiresome and ugly.
"Ružan" is ugly, homely, ill-featured etc http://www.krstarica.com/dictionary/index.php?u=ruzan
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 18:37  

Roller-Coaster
Viestien lukumäärä: 930
In this case "A zao mi da te obrisem" (And I feel sorry to delete you) is a bit ironic. (S)he thinks he's boring and ugly but feels sorry to take him off the list. (delete or block, as you wish).

Ugly is just ugly, there's no other way to tell it.

 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 18:55  

Mideia
Viestien lukumäärä: 949
Kafetzou, I suggested clunch after looking at a dictionnary. You're probably right, the greek one must be wrong. It doesn't say ugly, but without grace.I agree with Roller-Coaster :
Ugly is just ugly.I don't know why galka translated that way, and Cinderella probably didn't see it!That happens all the time!
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 19:11  

reggina
Viestien lukumäärä: 302
I kow they are synonyms but according to the greek version it is not a word you would use in this phrase.
Same thing with ugly; i guess the greek one is wrong.
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 19:54  

kafetzou
Viestien lukumäärä: 7963
Reggina, please leave the decisions about English usage to the English experts. Tiresome and boring are equal choices here.

As for "And I feel sorry to delete you!", it just doesn't sound sarcastic in English. My suggestion: "And I'm so sorry to have to delete you." (no exclamation point)

To be honest, I still don't understand why the word "and" is in there twice. Maybe the Greek version was right to get rid of it.
 

22 Heinäkuu 2008 20:29  

reggina
Viestien lukumäärä: 302
Kafetzou i just pointed out that the greek version is probably wrong...i guess a greek expert will understand that better than you do...
 
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