| | |
| | 12 liepa 2008 16:16 |
| | Hi bukentur
The English is mostly fine, but I have one or two suggestions for corrections.
I imagine that, by "some withdrawn" you mean, "somewhat withdrawn" or "shy".
To make things easier I have indicated the corrections I think are appropriate: Things in bold need adding or changing, things in brackets need taking out)
You are sweet, pretty, sensible and I think you are somewhat withdrawn. I think now (it) is the time for shedding your anxieties and letting go. I hope you will be nearer your friends.) Take care. We must realize the worth of our days, thesedays, musn't we? I sent you my huge kisses my friend
Let me know what you think. I've set a poll as I don't speak any Turkish.
Bises
Tantine
|
| | 12 liepa 2008 18:07 |
| | Hi Tantine
Thank you. ı dont know the difference with some and somewhat.You are right about shedding and letting go.And about these days,I wrote it only for explaining, actually it was "our todays" in turkish to tell the truth,but I wrote our days and added this days for showing it.
My English isn't perfect,I try to improve it.Thanks again.
Buket Nur |
| | 12 liepa 2008 23:44 |
| | "withdrawn /wɪðˈdrÉ”Ën/ US /-ˈdrÉ‘Ën/
adjective
shy and quiet and preferring to be alone rather than with other people" is not a name, it is adjective! the name is introvert |
| | 12 liepa 2008 23:51 |
| | What happened to "biraz daha cevrene acik olabilmen umidiyle"? |
| | 12 liepa 2008 23:54 |
| | netcevap, I don't know why you wrote what you wrote above - "kapanık" is also an adjective. By the way, I think you mean "noun", not "name". CC: netcevap |
| | 12 liepa 2008 23:55 |
| | buketnur, you should make the changes that Tantine suggested. |
| | 13 liepa 2008 05:21 |
| | "sweet, cute, sensible, and I think a little bit shy, with the hope that you can be a little more open to the people around you, I think it's time for you to throw aside the fear you have inside you and
let go take care of yourself, we need to realize the value of our todays, don't we? c'mon my friend - great big kisses"
|
| | 13 liepa 2008 05:23 |
| | P.S. The requester says (in Portuguese), "I received this message from a Turkish friend of my brother's and I would love to understand it - thanks" |
| | 13 liepa 2008 09:47 |
| | Yes I mean "noun" and "İçekapanık" is a noun , not an adjective. Thank you |
| | 13 liepa 2008 11:14 |
| | netcevap probably means it has to be translated with : "somewhat withdrawn', or "some introvert", but it can't be translated as "some withdrawn".
netcevap, please note that here an admin can't do anything more, on this page the expert in the target-language rules |
| | 13 liepa 2008 11:41 |
| | Thanks Kafetozu and Netcevap.
I made some changes with your advices.But I think we dont have to tranlate it exactly as the same meaning in turkish. |
| | 13 liepa 2008 13:40 |
| | Well, I mean Introvert without some. Introvert is a noun and can be adjective too. But here, it should be only a noun without "some". "withdrawn" is not a noun,but you may use "withdrawal" that means [U] when someone prefers to be alone and does not want to talk to other people. So it is a noun. Finally You can use "withdrawal" or "introvert" without some. |
| | 14 liepa 2008 05:32 |
| | netcevap, please check your information before you make statements like this.
1) "içekapanık" is an adjective, NOT a noun.
2) "introvert" is only a noun. The adjective is "introverted".
3) "some" does not work this way. Even if it were a noun, you cannot say "some introvert" - that would mean "içekapanık biri".
4) "withdrawal" is the noun for an action, not a person, as in "I made a withdrawal (of funds) from the bank."
buketnur, please do not follow everyone's instructions to you, unless you know you can trust that person. If you want to know whether I am qualified to talk about the English language, please read my profile.
And now, back to the translation:
buketnur, I think it looks pretty good now, but you need a space after every punctuation mark in English. Please fix this. |
| | 14 liepa 2008 05:34 |
| | buketnur, also please note that the requester, who received this note from his brother's friend, is male, so we cannot use "pretty". "Cute" would be better (as I suggested above). |
| | 14 liepa 2008 10:45 |
| | Dear Kafetzou
I am a liar of Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Because there is information says that " withdrawal /wɪðˈdrÉ”Ë.É™l/ US /-ˈdrÉ‘Ë-/:4 [U] when someone prefers to be alone and does not want to talk to other people. " So You just know only one meaning of withdrawal. There is forth meaning of it which is indicated above.
Also Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary says that "introvert /ˈɪn.trÉ™.vÉœËt/ US /-vÉËt/
noun [C]
someone who is shy, quiet and unable to make friends easily"
and "somewhat introvert" means " biraz içine kapanık" Because " somewhat /ˈsÊŒm.wÉ’t/ US /-wÉ‘Ët/
adverb SLIGHTLY FORMAL
slightly"
I like this website, because I reilized the facts.
|
| | 14 liepa 2008 19:12 |
| | What does your first sentence mean, netcevap?
The dictionary says that withdrawal is "when someone prefers to be alone and does not want to talk to other people", not "someone who prefers to be alone and does not want to talk to other people". Do you understand the difference now?
I'm sorry, but I really don't think it is fair of you to accuse me of knowing only one meaning of "withdrawal" - how on earth would you know what I know and don't know? |
| | 14 liepa 2008 19:17 |
| | buketnur, this looks good now, but maybe "casting off" should be "letting go", and it should not have a parenthesis mark after it.
Also, if you say "Come on my friend, I sent you my big kisses" in English in this context, it sounds a bit impatient. I would translate "kocaman öpüldün" simply with "great big kisses" (and no verb) - that would be more normal-sounding in English. |
| | 15 liepa 2008 07:36 |
| | Thanks Kafetzou
I thought to make changes with your advices but you accepted it , I saw messages new. I learned a lot of thing with cucumis and this tranlation. Thanks a lot |
| | 15 liepa 2008 08:53 |
| | You're welcome - you did a great job on this. |