Cucumis - Servei gratuït de traducció en línia
. .



Traducció - Francès-Anglès - Une pensée du Dalaï Lama

Estat actualTraducció
Aquest text està disponible en els següents idiomes: FrancèsHebreuAnglès

Categoria Expressió

Títol
Une pensée du Dalaï Lama
Text
Enviat per Francky5591
Idioma orígen: Francès

Celui qui veut vivre en paix, doit être appliqué, juste, conciliant, doux et humble.
Notes sobre la traducció
Après beaucoup de recherches, je n'ai malheureusement pas réussir à traduire cette expression. J'aimerai bien connaître cette expression en plusieurs langues et notamment en népalais et en hébreu calligraphié. Merci pour votre aide.

Títol
One of Dalaï Lama's thoughts
Traducció
Anglès

Traduït per Sah
Idioma destí: Anglès

Whoever wants to live in peace, must be diligent, just, conciliatory, mild and humble
Darrera validació o edició per kafetzou - 15 Maig 2007 17:47





Darrer missatge

Autor
Missatge

14 Maig 2007 23:36

Maribel
Nombre de missatges: 871
My dictionaries give
-assiduous, industrious, diligent for appliqué
-peaceable, compliant for conciliant
-gentle, kind (even merciful) for doux
But very hard to choose...

15 Maig 2007 12:20

cucumis
Nombre de missatges: 3785
This is a good translation for me. I'm surprised that most of the votes are red. Francky, if you made some important changes in the translation (as I see you've edited today), you should also reset the votes .

15 Maig 2007 12:24

Francky5591
Nombre de missatges: 12396
I'm not sure I understood well what you told me, JP, about "resetting the votes". (yes I did an edit, "assiduous" instead of "applied".

15 Maig 2007 14:30

ahikamr
Nombre de missatges: 51
I accidentally vote for this translation as not true (I'm not sure though, cause I should vote for the hebrew one) - but I do think it's true . The Hebrew transkation, from the other hand, is missing some words for some reason.

15 Maig 2007 14:38

ahikamr
Nombre de missatges: 51
Silly me!! now i'm seeing i'm the one who approved it - and i don't remember doing so! anyway, if hebrew is the original language (as i understand it) - the other translations added some words from some reason... If this is the Dalai Lama's saying - so one can check easily how it goes exactly. one way or another - the fact is the words: "assiduous, just" don't exist in the hebrew version.

15 Maig 2007 16:28

kafetzou
Nombre de missatges: 7963
I've changed "assiduous" to "diligent", but I'm still not sure about "reconciling" - how about "conciliatory"? I think I'll change it.

What jp means by "resetting" the votes, is to delete the vote request and then re-request it (starting from zero again). I just did that. Twice.

15 Maig 2007 20:00

Francky5591
Nombre de missatges: 12396
Never done that before (resetting the votes). What was wrong with "assiduous"(except it wasn't in the Hebrew dictionary)? I'm saying that because it's the only thing I changed in this text. "Diligent" in my dictionary rather means "hard working" than someone who applies himself. I found "assiduous" in an online dictionary, as my old one doesn't have "appliqué", it just has "appliquer"...

15 Maig 2007 22:22

kafetzou
Nombre de missatges: 7963
"assiduous" is a very rare word - most native speakers of English would not know what it means, whereas a diligent person is a person who applies himself with determination.

16 Maig 2007 09:09

Francky5591
Nombre de missatges: 12396
OK, thanks for this precision, it is funny to see how English words coming from French can have different meaning from it sometimes, as "diligent"in French rather means someone who does things with promptitude, and "assidu" is much closer to "appliqué", though its first meaning is about regularity (for instance, "fréquentation assidue" means that you use to go somewhere very regularly.)
Once an English speaking American correspondant use a term I'm not sure to remind, she was speaking about "cognates",and I don't know if it applies to this kind of mixing-up I did about these words...

16 Maig 2007 15:04

kafetzou
Nombre de missatges: 7963
In linguistics, a cognate is a word that looks the same and means the same thing. A "false cognate" is something like this where the word looks the same, but can be misleading.