Umseting - Svenskt-Persiskt - Min hund har fÃ¥tt epilepsianfall.Núverðandi støða Umseting
Hesin teksturin er tøkur í fylgjandi málum:
Bólkur Í vanligaru talu - Heilsa / Heilivágur Hendan umbidna umseting er "Bert meining". | Min hund har fÃ¥tt epilepsianfall. | | Uppruna mál: Svenskt
Min hund har fått epilepsianfall. |
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| سگ من Øمله‌های صرع داشته است | | Ynskt mál: Persiskt
سگ من Øمله‌های صرع داشته است. | Viðmerking um umsetingina | Many thanks to gamine for this English translation:
"My dog has had epileptic assaults." |
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Síðstu boð | | | | | 15 Juni 2011 09:29 | | piasTal av boðum: 8113 | epilepsianfall = epileptic seizure
Never heard of 'epileptic assaults', is it the same thing? | | | 15 Juni 2011 09:34 | | | I think gamine has meant "epileptic attacks". Anyway, both "assault" and "attack" can be translated to "Øمله" in Persian. | | | 16 Juni 2011 22:26 | | piasTal av boðum: 8113 | Ok But it doesn't say 'epileptic attacks' (epileptiska attacker) in the original, they might be similar... but we have 2 different words, isn't it the same for Farsi, no? | | | 17 Juni 2011 06:07 | | | Epileptic attacks = fits = seizures = Øمله‌های صرع
These terms are more or less synonymous. They all refer to episodes of epileptic activity.
"Convulsion" («تشنج») is a stricter term, referring to seizures involving abnormal, repetitive contractions of skeletal muscles.
Does the original Swedish text refer to epileptic seizures or epileptic convulsions? | | | 17 Juni 2011 09:30 | | piasTal av boðum: 8113 | Word by word: "My dog has got epileptic seizure". (It doesn't tell if it is one or several seizures) | | | 17 Juni 2011 10:50 | | | Thanks, pias. Please be assured that the expression "epileptic seizure" is correctly reflected in the Persian translation.
As for the number of the noun referring to seizure, I could change the translation to singular as below:
سگ من Øمله‌ی صرع داشته است.
But since the translation has already been validated, I didn't do that.
| | | 17 Juni 2011 14:26 | | piasTal av boðum: 8113 | No doubt your translation is correct ghasemkiani. I had never heard of 'epileptic assaults' before, so that's why I asked... I'm not a doctor
Thank you too! |
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