A label by any other name...
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I think the biggest issue Ravi is how you are going to use some of these for example, 'tomorrow' - in French if wanted to say 'tomorrow' as Im talking to someone and I know I'll be back and see them tomorrow, I'd simply say 'à demain', Italian I'd simply say 'a domani' In all of the cases Google has given you, they have given you '(the) tomorrow' - but, Im not a native speaker, I can get by in French, Italian, German, and know enough Spanish to order a coffee, so hopefully Carlo Pallini, Maximillien etc will be able to help you more (and you might want to indicate in your question how/where you're using the words ie context) 'g'
Garth J Lancaster wrote:
Im not a native speaker, I can get by in French, Italian, German, and know enough Spanish to order a coffee,
Yeah, but do you know how to order coffee tommorrow or tomorrow night in those languages ;)
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Garth J Lancaster wrote:
Im not a native speaker, I can get by in French, Italian, German, and know enough Spanish to order a coffee,
Yeah, but do you know how to order coffee tommorrow or tomorrow night in those languages ;)
yuck - it'd be cold by that time !!! :-) so I'd stick with maintenant, ora, jetzt & ahora ;P
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Google Translate tells me these are the equivalents for my English phrases (labels) in French, German, Italian and Spanish. While I generally trust Google, I thought it would be prudent to run the translations by native speakers. Any corrections (including casing) and comments are appreciated. Thanks!
English French German Italian Spanish
Today Aujourd'hui Heute Oggi Hoy
Tonight Cette nuit Heute Abend Le stasera Esta noche
Tomorrow Le demain Der Morgen Gli domani La mañana
Tomorrow night Demain soir Morgen Abend Domani sera La noche de mañana/ravi
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Well, I don't trust Google translate at all, to many funny results for that. But even if it's useless for this case I think I should tip you off on my way to find translations for more technical cases. I simply look up what I want to translate in Wikipedia and look for the article in other languages, et voila.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello