Tradução - Turco-Inglês - Aşık olamayan adem, yemiÅŸsiz aÄŸaca benzer.Estado actual Tradução
Este texto está disponível nas seguintes línguas:
Categoria Discurso - Sociedade / Gente / Política | Aşık olamayan adem, yemiÅŸsiz aÄŸaca benzer. | | Língua de origem: Turco
Aşık olamayan adem, yemişsiz ağaca benzer. | | |
|
| A human being who can't... | | Língua alvo: Inglês
A human being who can't fall in love is like a tree which can't bear fruit. |
|
Última validação ou edição por lilian canale - 1 Outubro 2014 14:44
Última Mensagem | | | | | 2 Agosto 2014 18:10 | | | Weird sentence, isn't it?
In order to sound better in English...could we change it into:
"A human being (or Someone) who never falls in love is like a tree which never bears fruit."?
Will that still convey the original? | | | 2 Agosto 2014 21:53 | | | Yes, it might be. But what's weird about saying 'a tree without fruit'? | | | 3 Agosto 2014 01:36 | | | I think it's not the same "a tree without fruit" (it may have already beared fruit someday and now there isn't any on it)) from "a tree which never bears fruit"
See what I mean?
I think that way the second part of the sentence fits the first part better. I may be wrong, please correct me. | | | 3 Agosto 2014 14:26 | | | I see, thanks. On my second reading, I realized there is a letter in the original sentence that escapes my notice, which makes the sentence into:
A human being who can't fall in love is like a tree without fruit.
Is that OK with you? | | | 3 Agosto 2014 15:31 | | | I'd put it this way:
'A human being who can't fall in love is like a tree which can't bear fruit.'
| | | 3 Agosto 2014 15:44 | | | Same thing goes for that. OK, then, I'll edit it as you said. Thanks a lot. |
|
|