Cucumis - Kostenloser Online-Übersetzungsdienst
. .



Übersetzung - Hebräisch-Englisch - והגדת לבנך

momentaner StatusÜbersetzung
Dieser Text ist in den folgenden Sprachen erhältlich: HebräischEnglischArabisch

Kategorie Ausdruck - Erziehung

Titel
והגדת לבנך
Text
Übermittelt von levyinon
Herkunftssprache: Hebräisch

והגדת לבנך
Bemerkungen zur Übersetzung
קטע מההגדה של פסח: "והגדת לבנך ביום ההוא.."

Titel
And you shall tell your son on that day...
Übersetzung
Englisch

Übersetzt von dramati
Zielsprache: Englisch

And you shall tell your son on that day...
Zuletzt bestätigt oder bearbeitet von dramati - 10 Februar 2008 10:51





Letzte Beiträge

Autor
Beitrag

12 Februar 2008 11:16

elmota
Anzahl der Beiträge: 744
hmmm, weird, the hebrew is much shorter than the english, maybe if u help me find out the arabic equivalent to it, it would be as short?

12 Februar 2008 12:36

dramati
Anzahl der Beiträge: 972
Hebrew is always much shorter than the English since:

1. We don't use vowels

2. The concepts need less words in Hebrew than in English.

A paragraph in Hebrew can be a big production in English.

13 Februar 2008 07:41

elmota
Anzahl der Beiträge: 744
yeah i know, thats why i need to know the word in hebrew to find out the arabic equivalent, i know לבנך is something like "labeinakh" which means "to your boy" (this is a good chance to revive my knowledge )
as for והגדת is it "vaihagadet?" which is "and ... something" and my question is how could this word mean: to tell on that day? is it possible that you translated the comment instead of just the words requested?

13 Februar 2008 10:44

dramati
Anzahl der Beiträge: 972
Actually labeinakh is your Son or Sons and vaihagadet is as I wrote it exactly as I translated it...to tell on that day. Hagada is a telling, the the Passover Hageda...it is a ritual telling of an event of the most importance to the Jews, the night of freedom from slavery. Hagedat Pasach is the telling of the story of the Passover. This is done in festive setting. Some Hebrew concepts have no English equivilent, such as our use of various forms of Hebrew for G-d.