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Traducerea - Franceză-Engleză - Ont mieux montré ce qu'il y avait de vrai en cette...

Status actualTraducerea
Acest text vă stă la dispoziţie în următoarele limbi: FrancezăGermanăEnglezăChineză simplificată

Titlu
Ont mieux montré ce qu'il y avait de vrai en cette...
Text
Înscris de henryasadam
Limba sursă: Franceză

Ont mieux montré ce qu'il y avait de vrai en cette oeuvre et ce que contenaient virtuellement ses principes.

Titlu
... have shown better the truth contained...
Traducerea
Engleză

Tradus de CocoT
Limba ţintă: Engleză

... have better shown the truth contained in this work-of-art and what its principles contained virtually.
Observaţii despre traducere
- "what was true in this work-of-art" did not quite mean the same, so I thought transforming the sentence a little worked for the best (even though that meant repeating the verb "contain")
- this is a sentence fragment, by the way...
Validat sau editat ultima dată de către kafetzou - 28 Februarie 2007 14:32





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25 Februarie 2007 23:07

kafetzou
Numărul mesajelor scrise: 7963
How about "have better shown what is real in this work of art ..."?

27 Februarie 2007 17:56

CocoT
Numărul mesajelor scrise: 165
It does sound much better, Kafetzou
The only problem I have is the distinction between "real" and "true" which, well, in some circumstances can be two very different concepts. The original does not use "réél", but then I don't know if it means much...
Tough...

27 Februarie 2007 22:50

kafetzou
Numărul mesajelor scrise: 7963
How about "what is true" then?

27 Februarie 2007 22:51

kafetzou
Numărul mesajelor scrise: 7963
Also, what about "its principles"? Only a person or an institution can have principles in English, not a work of art.

28 Februarie 2007 07:22

CocoT
Numărul mesajelor scrise: 165
"Principes" also sounds a little weird in French, but, like in French, I'm not sure the use of the word "principle" is that restricted. I'm thinking of the meaning of "laws underlying the way in which a particular object works" and that object does not need to be thinking or alive or made up of a thinking body (as in the case of an institution), as these "principles" are applied to it, not inherent to it. The simple meaning of "origin" could account for a use of the word, too.
This is yet another example of how impossible it is to give definite answers without proper context ( I mean... this sentence doesn't even have a subject! )

28 Februarie 2007 14:33

kafetzou
Numărul mesajelor scrise: 7963
Good points all. I decided to accept your translation as is.

2 Martie 2007 10:08

CocoT
Numărul mesajelor scrise: 165