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| | 11 Maggio 2007 23:14 |
| | Couldn't this also be a declaration of love to a child (mi niño)? |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 10:39 |
| SahNumero di messaggi: 47 | well it might be, but you can say mi niño also to say my love, referring to a parter. so i don't know |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 12:25 |
| | Sah, es una buena traducción, pero hay un término sin traducir. No dice eternamente sino tiernamente (tenderly, with tenderness)
"Siempre te adoraré tiernamente" literalmente serÃa "always I’ll adore you tenderly" No sé como suena en inglés. |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 12:35 |
| SahNumero di messaggi: 47 | puedo poner Adore si quieres no hay problema el significado es lo mismo màs o menos. ya, tienes razon no he leido bien lo de tiernamente |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 12:49 |
| SahNumero di messaggi: 47 | I don't know how to edit the first sentence, it must be : I'll always adore you tenderly |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 17:26 |
| | In English:
1) The first sentence is fine.
2) The second sentence sounds like it's talking about a child, i.e. a product of "this love".
3) The tenses are all mixed up - why?
4) What is "encendida" in this context? I changed it to "lit up", but "will live lit up" sounds strange in English. |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 19:17 |
| SahNumero di messaggi: 47 | encendida literally means alight. why are the tenses mixed up?
xx |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 19:23 |
| | Hi Sah
Here's where the tense seems odd: "if your love came into my life"
"alight" is a verb which means to land or settle on something. "lit up" is the adjective, but it sounds strange with "live". How about "illuminated"? |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 19:31 |
| SahNumero di messaggi: 47 | so you would say "the illusion will live illuminated" ?...it's fine for me as for "if your love came into my life" it's the meaning of "si tu amor llegò a mi vida" (altho in the text you'll find llego which is the 1st person present, so come, but i assume it's mispelled cas otherwise it wouldnt make much sense) |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 19:43 |
| | I had already assumed it was "llegó", but I still don't understand the meaning of the sentence - why is it past tense? Is her niño's love already in her life or not? Why is it an illusion?
And you're right, "the illusion will live illuminated" sounds just as dumb. Any suggestions? |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 21:54 |
| | Perdón, pensé que ya sabÃan, el texto es una variación de Siempre he de adorarte de Los Kjarkas.
KarlaÖz eliminó algunas lÃneas, adaptó otras (por ejemplo "prendida" lo cambió a "prendid o" ) y le puso un vocativo al final, mi niño - una forma cariñosa de referirse a su novio . |
| | 13 Maggio 2007 22:18 |
| | Thank you, pirulito - that's very helpful. I changed the word order a bit, and I think it sounds OK now.
I didn't get the connection before between the "if" an the use of past tense, but I do now. I hope the recipient of this love poem gets it. |