LL-L "Phonology" 2003.05.10 (03) [E]

Lowlands-L sassisch at yahoo.com
Sun May 11 02:07:32 UTC 2003


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L O W L A N D S - L * 10.May.2003 (03) * ISSN 189-5582 * LCSN 96-4226
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From: Colin Wilson <lcwilson at btinternet.com>
Subject: LL-L "Phonology" 2003.05.09 (08) [E]

t 00:16 10/05/03, Chris Ferguson wrote:

>Gaelic has a lot of poetic ways of expressing things. For instance
>"on dh'fhàg thu mi 's mulud orm" ( from a song ) - which is translated
>as "since you left me with sadness upon me" -but it is much more
>expressive than that - something like "since left you me and sadness
>upon me" ( "'s" is an affirmative form of "and" and is stronger than
>"agus" - these are the nuances in Gaelic that are just impossible to
>translate - so here in English to get near it you would need to stress
>the "and" ).

In English you could say "since you left me, full of sadness", which
exploits two different senses of "left" - i.e. "departed" and
"rendered". In Scots, the same principle would apply in e.g. "fae ye
left
me, ful o sadness".  I'm sceptical about the suggestion that any
(natural)
language is intrinsically more expressive than any other.

Guidwull tae awbodie,

Colin Wilson.

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