Cucumis - Service de traduction gratuit en ligne
. .



Traduction - Anglais-Latin - You don´t know me

Etat courantTraduction
Ce texte est disponible dans les langues suivantes: FrançaisAnglaisLatin

Catégorie Lettre / Email - Amour / Amitié

Titre
You don´t know me
Texte
Proposé par Galaduor
Langue de départ: Anglais Traduit par Cisa

You don´t know me, so I´ll introduce myself.
My passion is history and ancient languages.
I am the same age as you.
My favourite quotation is: As long as there is a spark, there is hope.

My Latin vocabulary is quite restricted so I offer you a riddle:

Here is the riddle:
When someone names me, I no longer exist. Who am I?

You probably won´t receive my letter. But I keep a ray of hope.

Titre
Non me cognoscis, ita inducam me ipsum/ ipsam
Traduction
Latin

Traduit par charisgre
Langue d'arrivée: Latin

Non me cognoscis, ita inducam me ipsam.
Cupidus historiae veterumque linguarum sum.
Id aetatis ut tuae sum.
Prelata mentio mea est:
Donec erit scintilla, erit spes.

Vocabula mea in Latina Lingua non multa sunt atque tibi offero unum scirpum.
Hic est scirpus:
Cum quidam dicit nomen meum, ego diutius non sum. Quis sum?

Tu forsitan non accipias litteras meas. At teneo radium spei.
Commentaires pour la traduction
Ipsum –masculine, ipsam –feminine for “myself”
I’ve preferred in translation to use “donec” for “as long as…” because it expresses more clearly the temporary connection
You can use “ego diutius non sum” and also ‘ego diutius non esto/ exsisto’ with the same meaning.
Dernière édition ou validation par Porfyhr - 5 Septembre 2007 13:03





Derniers messages

Auteur
Message

30 Août 2007 09:57

goncin
Nombre de messages: 3706
"litteras meas" -> "literam meam". The French original has it singular.

30 Août 2007 10:01

charisgre
Nombre de messages: 256
in Latin the word littera,-ae means letter e.g. U, A, E, G, etc - singular. The plural form litterae,-arum mean letter, id est a written message addressed to a person.

30 Août 2007 10:18

goncin
Nombre de messages: 3706
Thanks for clarifying, charisgre. It seems that you know Latin a lot... That's very good.

Be welcome to Cucumis!


Porfyhr, keep an eye on her - she is good!


CC: charisgre Porfyhr

30 Août 2007 10:25

Urunghai
Nombre de messages: 464
"Cum quidam dicit nomen meum, ego diutius non sum. Quis sum?"

Silentium!
Classic one
I wonder if the answer should be reflected in the question, i.e. "diutium sum - quid sum"

And well translated if you'd ask me.

30 Août 2007 10:32

charisgre
Nombre de messages: 256
Diutius is an adverb in the original, so I presumed you can't make a corelation between them. Plus I think the person who wrote it is a male, so "quis" is the proper pronoun, "quid" is for neutral. He said: "Who am I?" not "What am I?"

2 Septembre 2007 17:35

Porfyhr
Nombre de messages: 793
Charisgre,
you have voted against your own Latin translation.
Is it of any particular reason or just by mistake!

2 Septembre 2007 17:44

charisgre
Nombre de messages: 256
sorry, by mistake! I was just curious! I won't do it again! promise!