Place names
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bonidan
February 01, 2010, 06:18 AM
There are Spanish names for Bordeaux ,Stockholm, etc.
Now I am looking for Brandebourg in particular and other examples if time allows.
Thank you !
Ambarina
February 01, 2010, 06:34 AM
Brandebourg would probably be Brandeburgo seeing as most other place names with -bourg, -burg or -burgh endings are translated as -burgo: Estrasburgo, Edimburgo
Some more translations off the top of my head: Londres, Nueva York, Estambul, Moscú, Lieja, Bruselas, Colonia, Marsella, San Juan de Luz, Bretaña, Milán, Venecia, Florencia, Atenas, Ginebra...
irmamar
February 01, 2010, 11:15 AM
Brandenburgo: Los Conciertos de Brandenburgo, de J. S. Bach :love: :)
Ambarina
February 02, 2010, 02:15 AM
Brandenburgo: Los Conciertos de Brandenburgo, de J. S. Bach :love: :)
He visto las dos posibilidades: Brandeburgo y Brandemburgo:)
sosia
February 02, 2010, 03:54 AM
RAE: lista de algunas capitales
http://buscon.rae.es/dpdI/apendices/apendice5.html
Algunos de mis favoritos no aparecen, como la citada Brandemburgo y Aquisgrán (Aachen -lat.Aquisgranum)
Saludos :D
irmamar
February 02, 2010, 04:09 AM
In google:
"Brandeburgo": 192.000
"Brandenburgo": 162.000
"Brandemburgo": 111.000
My disk says Brandenburgo, as this one. :)
http://62.15.226.148/tc/2010/01/02/16722754.jpg
Perikles
February 02, 2010, 06:11 AM
Brandenburg is the correct spelling for the region of Germany, hence the concerti of Bach, but there a quite a few surnames such as Brandeburg etc, hence possibly the confusion.
irmamar
February 02, 2010, 11:47 AM
Brandenburg is the correct spelling for the region of Germany, hence the concerti of Bach, but there a quite a few surnames such as Brandeburg etc, hence possibly the confusion.
Do you say "concerti" with Italian plural? :thinking: :)
Perikles
February 02, 2010, 12:30 PM
Do you say "concerti" with Italian plural? :thinking: :):banghead: I knew when I wrote it, there would be query, and I guessed from whom. :p :lol: Yes, it is perfectly correct, even though (*think* you can't say even although :whistling:) most people these days would say concertos. But I can't bring myself to add an 's' to a polysyllabic Latin or Greek word ending in 'o'. :)
poli
February 02, 2010, 12:34 PM
...and concerto is pronounced concherto.
irmamar
February 02, 2010, 12:48 PM
:banghead: I knew when I wrote it, there would be query, and I guessed from whom. :p :lol: Yes, it is perfectly correct, even though (*think* you can't say even although :whistling:) most people these days would say concertos. But I can't bring myself to add an 's' to a polysyllabic Latin or Greek word ending in 'o'. :)
I you don't want to be asked, don't write such words :D
By the way, I always say "even though" (even although seems so long :D)
Thanks :)
...and concerto is pronounced concherto.
That's what I guessed, since this is an Italian word. :)
poli
February 02, 2010, 08:52 PM
I you don't want to be asked, don't write such words :D
By the way, I always say "even though" (even although seems so long :D)
Thanks :)
That's what I guessed, since this is an Italian word. :)
:warning:Never assume this. English speakers notoriously screw up foreign words.
The Brits are even worse at this than the Americans (sorry Peri but it's true)
xchic
February 02, 2010, 10:48 PM
:warning:Never assume this. English speakers notoriously screw up foreign words.
The Brits are even worse at this than the Americans (sorry Peri but it's true)
We don't screw them up- we anglicise them:p
Actually it's one of my pet hates that proper nouns get changed in different languages. I was listening to the TV news one day & they were talking about La Reina Isabel. I had to stop what I was doing to actually look at the TV to find out who they were talking about.
It was our very own Queen Elizabeth.
Why do they do that??!!
Here4good
February 02, 2010, 11:23 PM
We don't screw them up- we anglicise them:p
Actually it's one of my pet hates that proper nouns get changed in different languages. I was listening to the TV news one day & they were talking about La Reina Isabel. I had to stop what I was doing to actually look at the TV to find out who they were talking about.
It was our very own Queen Elizabeth.
Why do they do that??!!
Carlos Dickens used to get me... They don't seem to do that any more, but they do still talk about Principe Carlos...
irmamar
February 03, 2010, 01:12 AM
Don't you do the same? Why do you say Spain, Seville, Catalonia. Although I agree because you say King Juan Carlos. Sometimes, we say Reina Elisabeth (instead of Elizabeth), too. :)
I've never heard "Carlos" Dickens, but Charles.:thinking:
xchic
February 03, 2010, 01:19 AM
Don't you do the same? Why do you say Spain, Seville, Catalonia. Although I agree because you say King Juan Carlos. Sometimes, we say Reina Elisabeth (instead of Elizabeth), too. :)
I've never heard "Carlos" Dickens, but Charles.:thinking:
Place names I can sort of understand - although I still don't like it:(
Changing the names of people is ridiculous though!
I even saw on our local Valenciano channel they changed the name of one of the infantas to a Valenciano version when she was born!
irmamar
February 03, 2010, 01:25 AM
Such things are very common here in Catalonia,as "Rei Joan Carles" and "Príncep Felip". I don't agree with it, but it's very common. I have a Spanish name they always change it into a Catalonian one. Don't ask me why, it's written in my DNI, I think they're able to read it :thinking:
pjt33
February 03, 2010, 01:57 AM
Los medios españoles cambian algunos nombres pero otros no. Nunca he leído "Antonio Blair" en el periódico.
Perikles
February 03, 2010, 02:38 AM
:warning:Never assume this. English speakers notoriously screw up foreign words.
The Brits are even worse at this than the Americans (sorry Peri but it's true)I'm not quite sure what you mean with 'screw up' - examples please, especially where Brits get in wrong and Americans don't. :p:)
Changing the names of people is ridiculous though!Wasn't it Blandirlanze who wrote Macbeth?
Ambarina
February 03, 2010, 02:55 AM
Wasn't it Blandirlanze who wrote Macbeth?
Oooohh! I like this game. :wicked:
Alejandro G. Campana inventó el teléfono
Alberto Una Piedra descubrió la teoría de la relatividad
July Churches is a famous Spanish singer
I could go on....but I won't ;):D
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