Cucumis - Free online translation service
. .



Translation - Greek-English - ...υπάρχουν οι τοίχοι οι θεόρατοι

Current statusTranslation
This text is available in the following languages: GreekEnglish

Category Chat

Šis tulkojums pieprasa tikai nozīmi.
Title
...υπάρχουν οι τοίχοι οι θεόρατοι
Text
Submitted by khalili
Source language: Greek

...υπάρχουν οι τοίχοι οι θεόρατοι γύρω μας με την κατασταση που επικρατεί.....
Οταν οι τοίχοι γιγαντώνονται και στο σπίτι, και δεν 'γεμίζεις' από πουθενά, ούτε κι από αυτούς ή αυτά που αγαπάς...

Title
Huge walls around us
Translation
English

Translated by AspieBrain
Target language: English

there are huge walls around us with the existing situation...
When the walls grow also at home, and you can't 'receive fulfillment' from anywhere, not even from those whom you love or the things you enjoy...
Validated by User10 - 23 December 2010 14:57





Last messages

Author
Message

20 December 2010 20:02

kafetzou
Number of messages: 7963
Two small corrections:

from nowhere --> from anywhere
not even those --> not even from those

21 December 2010 10:52

AspieBrain
Number of messages: 212
the word πουθενα means nowhere, anywhere is καπου.
I agree with the correction "not even from those", I do agree that the word "from" needs to be added!

21 December 2010 16:53

User10
Number of messages: 1173
Yes, but we have two negatives here... "can't", "nowhere"...

"Anywhere" is translated and as "πουθενά" when there is a negative in the sentence ( "can't" ).

My question as a non native speaker: Is using these 2 negatives together acceptable by a native in everyday talking?

CC: kafetzou

21 December 2010 21:47

AspieBrain
Number of messages: 212
Yes, I agree we do have two negatives here just like the way the sentence was written in Greek: και δεν 'γεμίζεις' από πουθενά.
I am not doing a grammatical improvement to the text, I am translating it. So, if there were 2 negatives in the original text, I do not see any reason for not using be 2 negatives also in the translation. And yes, 2 negatives are often used in everyday language in English just like in Greek.
Also, I feel that we are wasting time and energy on a trivial matter discussing whether it should be nowhere or anywhere, since both words fit the meaning just as you mentioned. If you want to use anywhere instead of nowhere go ahead. No problem.

21 December 2010 21:50

kafetzou
Number of messages: 7963
No. That's why I posted the correction. "not ... anywhere" is correct. "not ... nowhere" is incorrect.

Aspiebrain, you write like a native speaker of English, but double negatives are incorrect in English. You should know that.

P.S. Somewhere is καπου.