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Translation - Turkish-English - Merhaba tatlım. Tanıştığıma memnun oldum....

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Category Chat - Love / Friendship

Title
Merhaba tatlım. Tanıştığıma memnun oldum....
Text
Submitted by ruffee
Source language: Turkish

Merhaba tatlım. Tanıştığıma memnun oldum. Öncelikle ingilizcem fazla iyi değildir. Anlaşmakta biraz sıkıntı çekeceğiz gibi. Ama sana kendimden az çok bahsedebilirim. 18 yaşındayım. İstanbul'da yaşıyorum. Benimde gayet sakin bir hayatım var. Bazen çok neşeliyimdir ama sessiz kalmayı tercih ederim. Mesajını yanıtsız bırakmamaya çalışıyorum, mutlu ol istiyorum. Bu arada seyahat etmeyi sevdiğini söylemişsin, İstanbul'a da beklerim. Her neyse canım, iyi günler. Öpüldün
Remarks about the translation
İngiliz ya da U.S lehçesinde olabilir.

Title
Hello, my sweety.
Translation
English

Translated by merdogan
Target language: English

Hello, my sweety. Nice to meet you. First of all, my English is not very good. It seems we will have some problems understanding each other. But I can tell you a bit about myself. I am 18 years old. I am living in Istanbul. My life is also very quiet. Sometimes I am very joyful but I prefer to keep quiet. I'm trying not to leave your message unanswered, I want you to be happy. By the way you told me you like to travel, I wait for you in Istanbul, too. Anyway, my dear, have a good day. Kiss you.

Validated by Lein - 26 January 2012 13:04





Last messages

Author
Message

24 January 2012 17:09

cepekubra
Number of messages: 8
hello honey.nice to meet you.firstly,ı can't speak english very well.we can suffer communication.but ı can talk about myself.ı am 18 years old.ı am living in istanbul.ı have got calm life,too.ı am sometimes cheerful but ı prefer to be calm.ı try to answer your message,ı want to be your happiness.by the way you said that you like traveling,ı want to come to istanbul.anyway,have a good day.ı kissed.

24 January 2012 17:11

ruffee
Number of messages: 1
teşekkürler

24 January 2012 20:30

Mesud2991
Number of messages: 1331
I am too joyful --> I am joyful (if you say 'very joyful', you mean that the person is extremely happy) or I am very cheerful (by the way, 'too' gives a negative meaning to sentences.

I'm trying not to leave you message unanswered --> I'm trying not to leave your message unanswered

I want you will be happy --> I want you to be happy

I wait for you in Istanbul, too. --> I'll be glad if you come to Ä°stanbul.

24 January 2012 21:28

merdogan
Number of messages: 3769
Dear Mesud,
Thanks,
I accept only (you..> your message).

24 January 2012 21:49

Mesud2991
Number of messages: 1331
OK. But still I suggest you to have a look at a dictionary for the adverb "too". I'm pretty sure about it.

24 January 2012 22:27

merdogan
Number of messages: 3769
As I remember you said for "too" once;
"I can also do this/I can do this, too/I can do this, as well." They all are the same

24 January 2012 22:34

Mesud2991
Number of messages: 1331
Yes, but I'm not talking about that 'too'. I'm talking about the 'too' in the sentence "Sometimes I am too joyful".

24 January 2012 22:38

merdogan
Number of messages: 3769
O.k . Let's wait for another comments.

25 January 2012 13:05

Lein
Number of messages: 3389
Hi both

I have made a few minor edits to the original translation. Original translation copied below.

'I want you will be happy' is not a correct English sentence, so I changed it to 'I want you to be happy'. Another possibility is 'I hope you will be happy', but that doesn't fit as well here.

As for 'too', this does have a somewhat negative meaning here. 'I am too happy' = 'I am happier than I should be'. If you mean 'very joyful' or 'very cheerful', both sound fine and I can change it.


Translation before my edits:

Hello, my sweety. Nice to meet you. First of all, my English is not very good. It seems we will have some problems for understanding each other. But I can tell you about myself more or less. I am 18 years old. I am living in Istanbul. My life is also very quiet. Sometimes I am too joyful but I prefer to keep quiet. I'm trying not to leave your message unanswered, I want you will be happy. By the way you told me you like to travel, I wait for you in Istanbul, too. Anyway, my dear, good days. Kiss you.

25 January 2012 13:29

Mesud2991
Number of messages: 1331
Does 'joyful' mean 'very happy'? Do we have to say 'very joyful' if the person is not extremely happy?

And the part "Bazen çok neşeliyimdir" should be tranlated as "I'm sometimes very cheerful". Because the writer doesn't mean that he has an unnecessary happiness.

25 January 2012 13:25

merdogan
Number of messages: 3769
Dear Lein,
Thanks,
'very joyful' is O.K.

25 January 2012 13:26

Lein
Number of messages: 3389
'joyful' and 'happy' mean almost the same thing, so 'very joyful' would mean 'very happy'.

I'll wait for Merdogan's reaction to the second comment

25 January 2012 13:38

Mesud2991
Number of messages: 1331
Thank you Lein.

See above, he made his comment about it.

25 January 2012 18:16

Arnavut Biberi
Number of messages: 74
"Have a good day" should be used instead of "good days"