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Translation - Brazilian Portuguese-French - Passo a passo se vai longe.

Current statusTranslation
This text is available in the following languages: Brazilian PortugueseFrench

This translation request is "Meaning only".
Title
Passo a passo se vai longe.
Text
Submitted by erescris
Source language: Brazilian Portuguese

Passo a passo se vai longe.
Remarks about the translation
Francês da França.

Title
Pas à pas, on va loin.
Translation
French

Translated by Lev van Pelt
Target language: French

Pas à pas, on va loin.
Remarks about the translation
moins littéral mais parfaitement adapté à la signification : "C'est en forgeant que l'on devient forgeron"
Last validated or edited by Francky5591 - 12 September 2012 01:22





Latest messages

Author
Message

12 September 2012 01:10

Lev van Pelt
Number of messages: 313
@Francky5591

"C'est en forgeant qu'on devient forgeron"..., et je l'avue, cette chance il ne me déplaise pas la risquer

(Anyway, I'd be sorry if I've done something wrong fourrant mon nez ici.)
(I mean that I have not French among my target languages ; but in this case I felt almost as if translating into Catalan…))

12 September 2012 01:20

Francky5591
Number of messages: 12396
I mean no, Lev, you didn't do anything wrong It's all about practising.
About the fact you translated into French we say "qui ne risque rien n'a rien"



12 September 2012 01:33

Lev van Pelt
Number of messages: 313
Thanks a lot, Francky, but unwillingly, I have induced you to an error here.
The saying that I included in my message was not intended to make reference at all to the text submitted.
I just wrote it to explain why I have dared to translate this !!!
I notice now that the original text and this proverb are very similar in sense...
(Perhaps you ought to erase the remark, as it was not intended as a remark ?)

12 September 2012 02:18

Francky5591
Number of messages: 12396
So you didn't post this intentionally

Actually I think "passo a passo se vai longe" also refers to a patient practising, and so does what "c'est en forgeant que l'on devient forgeron" means.

I've seen this here : http://fikgs.wordpress.com/2012/08/06/passo-a-passo-se-vai-longe/

*(Progressivamente, acreditamos que é a melhor forma de aprender e evoluir com eficácia e motivação. Dar tempo para praticar é fundamental!)

So it also matches the meaning, it's just (talking about the French) a less litteral translation.

12 September 2012 02:18

Francky5591
Number of messages: 12396
We also say, about what happened above :

"Le hasard fait bien les choses"

12 September 2012 05:46

Lev van Pelt
Number of messages: 313
Oui, Francky!

I agree with you that hazard (or whatever) has worked rightly this time . Once again!
In fact, when translating this short, easy sentence, I have doubted to write "peu à peu, on va loin" (in Italian, one says: "piano piano, si va lontano" or "chi va piano, va lontano", and I would have used one of these ways as the first option, and not "passo a passo, etc." )
In fact, I have even considered to write this as a remark (I mean about "peu à peu..." ), but I was not sure that this way was much used in France (I hope you will tell me about this. Yes,...I do want to become someday a "forgeron" regarding French )

In Catalan, apart from the literal "pas a pas, hom va lluny" (or "pas a pas, es va lluny", one may say as well: "poc a poc/ poc a poquet/ s'arriba lluny".

A most interesting and illustrative chat, Francky... Truly a pleasure, as usual!





12 September 2012 16:16

erescris
Number of messages: 1
Obrigada, era exatamente essa a tradução que eu esperava: Pas à pas, on va loin.

12 September 2012 16:33

Francky5591
Number of messages: 12396
Nada, foi um prazer, erescris!

13 September 2012 11:19

Lev van Pelt
Number of messages: 313
Agradeço o "feedback", erescris.