Cucumis - Service de traduction gratuit en ligne
. .



Traduction - Portuguais brésilien-Anglais - -Sempre alerta ; -Alerta, cobrir... Monitor,...

Etat courantTraduction
Ce texte est disponible dans les langues suivantes: Portuguais brésilienAnglaisAllemand

Catégorie Ecriture libre - Culture

Titre
-Sempre alerta ; -Alerta, cobrir... Monitor,...
Texte
Proposé par Cabrale
Langue de départ: Portuguais brésilien

-Sempre alerta ;

-Alerta, cobrir... Monitor, patrulha em formação !

-Alerta, sub assume ;

-Prometo, pela minha honra, fazer o melhor possível ;
Commentaires pour la traduction
No escotismo, essas são algumas das orações usadas nos dias das reuniões, constantemente... necessito da tradução em 3 línguas porque visitaremos estes países em breve. (Mais necessariamente em latim e em russo!)

Titre
Boy Scout Terms and Commands
Traduction
Anglais

Traduit par Richard Roe
Langue d'arrivée: Anglais

(1) "Be Prepared"

(2) "Attention, march! Patrol Leader, Patrol fall in!"

(3) Attention, Junior Patrol Leader, assume command!

(4) "On my honor, I will do my best..."
Commentaires pour la traduction
(1) The motto of the Boy Scouts in the Lusophone world, "Sempre Alerta," is a translation of the original English "Be Prepared."

(2) Sections (2) and (3) concern close-order drill commands, which vary from troop to troop. Consequently, and in the interest of full disclosure, please note that this translator is uncertain of the command "cobrir" in this context. I have conjectured that "cobrir" is used here in its sense of "percorrer determinada distancia." Additional context and precise punctuation would necessary to render these commands exactly.

(3) Assuming that the use of “sub” in this case is a truncation of the title “Sub-Monitor,” the correct translation is “Junior Patrol Leader.”

(4) This is a Portuguese-language translation of the first line of the Boy Scout oath, which in English is as follows: "On my honor I will do my best/To do my duty to God and my country/and to obey the Scout Law;/To help other people at all times;/To keep myself physically strong,/mentally awake, and morally straight."
Dernière édition ou validation par kafetzou - 16 Septembre 2007 16:05





Derniers messages

Auteur
Message

11 Septembre 2007 13:08

nmcaldas
Nombre de messages: 4
Attention=Atencao nao Alerta
On my honor, I will do my best..." =
pela minha honra, farei o meu melhor

11 Septembre 2007 13:43

Menininha
Nombre de messages: 545
nmcaldas and everyone else who could be interessed:

Please see the discussion in this first translation.

CLICK HERE!

Thanks

11 Septembre 2007 16:07

ortizon
Nombre de messages: 23
The only thing wrong is the "cobrir" it is used to calculated the distance between each boy scout

11 Septembre 2007 21:38

Richard Roe
Nombre de messages: 3
Thank you, Ortizon! That inaccuracy was torturing me.

While the Scouts may have a unique command for that movement, the standard drill command would be "Right (or Left) Dress!" This calls for each man to hold his right arm out parallel to the ground, with his hand just short of the shoulder of the man to his right, to ensure uniform spacing.

12 Septembre 2007 22:35

jafi
Nombre de messages: 1
O termo "march" quer dizer marchar e não cobrir. Apenas isso.

23 Octobre 2007 06:52

Rodrigues
Nombre de messages: 1621
"cobrir" => "defilade" and not "march"

Therefore the English translation isn't correct !

22 Octobre 2007 21:24

Richard Roe
Nombre de messages: 3
The word you're looking for is "therefore" and not "therefor." You also failed to capitalize the initial letter in the word "English." But thanks for your interesting and helpful comments. Good luck on your English!

23 Octobre 2007 16:43

Rodrigues
Nombre de messages: 1621
I didn't understand, why "Richard Roe" is laying into my english, while I was pointing out, that the english translation from the portuguese text isn't correct, because "cobrir" isn't "march", but "defilade" !! ????

24 Octobre 2007 15:35

Rodrigues
Nombre de messages: 1621
The word "march" is still not edited by "defilade" ??

24 Octobre 2007 16:50

goncin
Nombre de messages: 3706
KafaÅ­guristino,

It seems that this page check is for you.

CC: kafetzou

25 Octobre 2007 00:05

kafetzou
Nombre de messages: 7963
What is defilade? I never heard of it.

Maybe it should be "Forward march!"

25 Octobre 2007 00:14

kafetzou
Nombre de messages: 7963
According to this page,

The only Word-of-Mouth commands necessary are
"Troop Atten ... tion!"
"Troop at ... Ease!"
"Scout Sign!"
"Scout Salute!"
"Hands ... Down!" or "Two!"


So ... is "troop" the word we want for "cobrir"?

25 Octobre 2007 01:55

Rodrigues
Nombre de messages: 1621
But "cobrir" means in german "Deckung / bedecken" and this I knows from my military service is, when all soldat's of a group have to cover/hide them in the ditch, for the enemy cannot see them. This is, like I know the word (german).
On www.leo.org you enter "Deckung" there went "defilade [mil.]" the "mil." means military-word...

25 Octobre 2007 02:03

casper tavernello
Nombre de messages: 5057
No Franz.
The word "cobrir" is used as Ortizon said, where the boys are in line and each boy puts his hand on the shoulder of the boy on his front.
We used to do it in schools here.

25 Octobre 2007 05:52

Rodrigues
Nombre de messages: 1621
ok - accepted, but nevertheless this type of "doing" isn't "march" in english.