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ترجمة - عربي-انجليزي - ليس الحب أن تبقى مع من تحب....... لكن الحب.......

حالة جاريةترجمة
هذا النص متوفر في اللغات التالية: عربيانجليزي

صنف تعبير - حب/ صداقة

عنوان
ليس الحب أن تبقى مع من تحب....... لكن الحب.......
نص
إقترحت من طرف الأشوس
لغة مصدر: عربي

ليس الحب أن تبقى مع من تحب....... لكن الحب.... أن تثق بأنك بقلب من تحب

عنوان
Love is not to remain with one's beloved... but love.....
ترجمة
انجليزي

ترجمت من طرف akli
لغة الهدف: انجليزي

Love is not to remain with your beloved..., but love.....is to trust that you dwell in your beloved's heart."
آخر تصديق أو تحرير من طرف lilian canale - 24 تشرين الاول 2010 15:08





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الكاتب
رسالة

15 تشرين الاول 2010 14:33

lilian canale
عدد الرسائل: 14972
Hi akli,
This line is a bit confusing. Perhaps it should be:

"Love is not to stay with your beloved..., but love.....is to trust that you dwell in your beloved's heart."

17 تشرين الاول 2010 11:42

akli
عدد الرسائل: 17
Hi Lilian,

For "remain", I think it is a little more formal than "stay" that is the only difference, otherwise they have the same meaning, both of them can be used.
Concerning "One's" and "your" that you suggested, I chose "One's" because it is a generality, a kind of "proverb, rule" that addresses anyone, everybody. That was why I preferred "one's" rather than "your". In arabic "one's" and "your" are same, arabic reader can only detect from the context whether it is a generality "one's" or addressed to somebody "your". I understood from the arabic text's context that is is a generality which is normally translated to english by "one's". What do you think Lilian?

17 تشرين الاول 2010 14:35

lilian canale
عدد الرسائل: 14972
Hi again akli,

"remain/stay/rest/continue" are synonyms in most cases, but none of them is more formal than the other.
About "one's" "your","a person's" or "people's", are all used to generalize, not to address someone. I suggested using "your" to avoid that second genitive case at the end which may sound a bit "heavy". See what I mean?

17 تشرين الاول 2010 15:29

akli
عدد الرسائل: 17
Hi Lilian,
I fully understand what you mean: two genitives sound surely heavy, and I agree with you. However this problem had always been a headache for translators and will always be: privilege meaning or aesthetics? what a dilemma!! is n't it?. The solution depends on the translator. However, since substituting "your" to "one's" does not harm too much the meaning, let's do that!
thanks