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Käännös - Portugali-Englanti - Os noivos agradecem a presença

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Kategoria Jokapäiväinen elämä - Koti / Perhe

Otsikko
Os noivos agradecem a presença
Teksti
Lähettäjä caroluezu
Alkuperäinen kieli: Portugali

Os noivos agradecem a presença

Otsikko
The bride and groom thank you for your presence
Käännös
Englanti

Kääntäjä denizemat
Kohdekieli: Englanti

The bride and groom thank you for your presence
Huomioita käännöksestä
or:
The bride and groom thank you for coming (to their wedding)
Viimeksi tarkastanut tai toimittanut IanMegill2 - 1 Marraskuu 2007 03:20





Viimeinen viesti

Kirjoittaja
Lähetä

29 Lokakuu 2007 12:45

Rodrigues
Viestien lukumäärä: 1621
isn't it "...thank for ..." ?

30 Lokakuu 2007 11:19

IanMegill2
Viestien lukumäärä: 1671
Does this mean
The bride and the groom thank you for coming (to their wedding), i.e.
The bride and groom thank you for your presence (at their wedding)?


CC: denizemat anabela_fernandes Borges casper tavernello joner thathavieira

30 Lokakuu 2007 11:25

goncin
Viestien lukumäärä: 3706
Ian,

That can mean one thing or another, but I bet in this case it's a farewell message. Therefore, "The bride and groom thank you for your presence (at their wedding)", unless the requester say otherwise.

30 Lokakuu 2007 11:28

Rodrigues
Viestien lukumäärä: 1621
The bride and groom thank for the presence (of the guests).

30 Lokakuu 2007 12:24

IanMegill2
Viestien lukumäärä: 1671
Thanks, goncin and Rodrigues!
Yup, that's what I thought: it's kind of a standard phrase, and it makes sense!
I'll wait for a little more feedback from other people too, to see if they have any other good ideas...

30 Lokakuu 2007 13:00

casper tavernello
Viestien lukumäärä: 5057
Just a standard phrase.
The bri... thank you fou your presence.

31 Lokakuu 2007 03:21

IanMegill2
Viestien lukumäärä: 1671
Original form of translation before editing:
The bride and groom thank the presence

31 Lokakuu 2007 03:29

Rodrigues
Viestien lukumäärä: 1621
The original text doesn't let someone know, for which presence they're thanking for!

Therefor it shouldn't contain "you / your" in the translation.
Literally:
The bride and groom thank for the presence.

31 Lokakuu 2007 04:11

IanMegill2
Viestien lukumäärä: 1671
Hi Rodrigues!
Thanks for your comment! I have two more questions for you:
1. Could it possibly be anyone else's presence the card is talking about; i.e. should we translate it as:
The bride and groom thank everyone for coming
?
2. Is this a very common way to say this in Portuguese, or is it strange to say
Os noivos agradecem a presença
in Portuguese?


31 Lokakuu 2007 05:19

Melissenta
Viestien lukumäärä: 87
As far as I know "die Verlobten" means "the engaged couple" before wedding. But "Bride and groom" renders to German "Braut und Bräutigam".

31 Lokakuu 2007 06:10

Rodrigues
Viestien lukumäärä: 1621
=> Melissenta:

but "noivos" can be "the engaged couple" and/or "bride and groom".

But for one of the two possibilies we have to decide us ;-)

31 Lokakuu 2007 07:43

Rodrigues
Viestien lukumäärä: 1621
=> lanMegill2:

your question, if it's strange or common, should answer a native speaker.

31 Lokakuu 2007 07:52

goncin
Viestien lukumäärä: 3706
Ian,

"Os noivos agradecem a presença" is a perfectly natural sentence in Portuguese. It may seem strange to foreign eyes, because it doesn't explicit the destinatary of the message (the indirect object is implicit).

IMHO, the present form of the translation is almost good, but it seems to lack a second article: "The bride and the groom thank you for your presence".

31 Lokakuu 2007 12:34

askim00
Viestien lukumäärä: 1
es heisst Die Braut und derBräutigam danken Ihnen für Ihre Anwesenheit. aber im grossen ubd ganzen ist es richtig

1 Marraskuu 2007 03:18

IanMegill2
Viestien lukumäärä: 1671
Good! Thanks, goncin!
I just wanted to know if it was a strange way to say this in Portuguese: if it's perfectly natural to say it this way, I'll put it into natural English too (for example, the kind of English you would see on cards and other formal published materials).
Thanks for all your help, everybody!