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Are these the correct translations ?


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2















I just want to make sure I've translated these correctly:



1) I want to say:




Love makes the sweetest and most delicate adversities in life.




I render it in French as follows:




L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.




2) I want to say:




Without (the slightest) hope of return




I render it in French as:




Sans espoir de retour.




3) I also wanted to ask (as this is for a poem) is it okay to say the mixed language sentence:




Love should be a gift sans espoir de retour!











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can'tcauchy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • I edited your question. Note that contrary to French, there is not a space between the word and the ponctuation signs.

    – dimitris
    3 hours ago
















2















I just want to make sure I've translated these correctly:



1) I want to say:




Love makes the sweetest and most delicate adversities in life.




I render it in French as follows:




L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.




2) I want to say:




Without (the slightest) hope of return




I render it in French as:




Sans espoir de retour.




3) I also wanted to ask (as this is for a poem) is it okay to say the mixed language sentence:




Love should be a gift sans espoir de retour!











share|improve this question









New contributor




can'tcauchy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • I edited your question. Note that contrary to French, there is not a space between the word and the ponctuation signs.

    – dimitris
    3 hours ago














2












2








2








I just want to make sure I've translated these correctly:



1) I want to say:




Love makes the sweetest and most delicate adversities in life.




I render it in French as follows:




L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.




2) I want to say:




Without (the slightest) hope of return




I render it in French as:




Sans espoir de retour.




3) I also wanted to ask (as this is for a poem) is it okay to say the mixed language sentence:




Love should be a gift sans espoir de retour!











share|improve this question









New contributor




can'tcauchy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I just want to make sure I've translated these correctly:



1) I want to say:




Love makes the sweetest and most delicate adversities in life.




I render it in French as follows:




L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.




2) I want to say:




Without (the slightest) hope of return




I render it in French as:




Sans espoir de retour.




3) I also wanted to ask (as this is for a poem) is it okay to say the mixed language sentence:




Love should be a gift sans espoir de retour!








traduction anglais






share|improve this question









New contributor




can'tcauchy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




can'tcauchy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago









LPH

8,633421




8,633421






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can'tcauchy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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asked 4 hours ago









can'tcauchycan'tcauchy

1133




1133




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New contributor





can'tcauchy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






can'tcauchy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • I edited your question. Note that contrary to French, there is not a space between the word and the ponctuation signs.

    – dimitris
    3 hours ago



















  • I edited your question. Note that contrary to French, there is not a space between the word and the ponctuation signs.

    – dimitris
    3 hours ago

















I edited your question. Note that contrary to French, there is not a space between the word and the ponctuation signs.

– dimitris
3 hours ago





I edited your question. Note that contrary to French, there is not a space between the word and the ponctuation signs.

– dimitris
3 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














"1)" is correct;



I wonder whether "make for" wouldn't be a more appropriate verb; it correspond fairly well to the choice I made in French : you couldn't use "faire" in French.



"Sans espoir de retour" is perfect.



Well, mixing languages is fine as long as there is a common understanding; first of all you have to be understood. As "sans espoir de retour" does not introduce a new concept, as its English equivalent is exact there is no need for that ; however if there exists a particular context involving French culture you can do that; it was Edgar Allan Poe who could do that in his work and as a matter of fact in connection with French; he would put in whole sentences, as for instance in his short story "The Murders in The Rue Morgue".






share|improve this answer


























  • hmm I wasn't expecting it to be so drastically different for (1) I actually got it from herehttps://frenchtogether.com/french-love-quotes/ but tried to make a few adjustments so it would rhyme with bloomed on the 10th syllable and be on the 20th . what does the link actually say ( its the Madeleine de Scudery quote about a quarter down the page )

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago













  • also is there any way to express the sentence you gave with the restriction on rhyme I mentioned ?

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy I see one part of the problem; I thought "doucers" couldn't be anything eles than the adjective and the "missing "grandes" didn't help to clear out that erroneous deduction. I don't get your syllable count (don't understand it).

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy You can use this construction: " L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.", but of course you modify the quote.

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • on the tenth syllable of the sentence I want a long ooo sound like plus as this then rhyme with bloomed, on the twentieth syllable of the sentence I want an eeee seound like vie , so it rhymes with be

    – can'tcauchy
    1 hour ago











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









2














"1)" is correct;



I wonder whether "make for" wouldn't be a more appropriate verb; it correspond fairly well to the choice I made in French : you couldn't use "faire" in French.



"Sans espoir de retour" is perfect.



Well, mixing languages is fine as long as there is a common understanding; first of all you have to be understood. As "sans espoir de retour" does not introduce a new concept, as its English equivalent is exact there is no need for that ; however if there exists a particular context involving French culture you can do that; it was Edgar Allan Poe who could do that in his work and as a matter of fact in connection with French; he would put in whole sentences, as for instance in his short story "The Murders in The Rue Morgue".






share|improve this answer


























  • hmm I wasn't expecting it to be so drastically different for (1) I actually got it from herehttps://frenchtogether.com/french-love-quotes/ but tried to make a few adjustments so it would rhyme with bloomed on the 10th syllable and be on the 20th . what does the link actually say ( its the Madeleine de Scudery quote about a quarter down the page )

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago













  • also is there any way to express the sentence you gave with the restriction on rhyme I mentioned ?

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy I see one part of the problem; I thought "doucers" couldn't be anything eles than the adjective and the "missing "grandes" didn't help to clear out that erroneous deduction. I don't get your syllable count (don't understand it).

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy You can use this construction: " L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.", but of course you modify the quote.

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • on the tenth syllable of the sentence I want a long ooo sound like plus as this then rhyme with bloomed, on the twentieth syllable of the sentence I want an eeee seound like vie , so it rhymes with be

    – can'tcauchy
    1 hour ago
















2














"1)" is correct;



I wonder whether "make for" wouldn't be a more appropriate verb; it correspond fairly well to the choice I made in French : you couldn't use "faire" in French.



"Sans espoir de retour" is perfect.



Well, mixing languages is fine as long as there is a common understanding; first of all you have to be understood. As "sans espoir de retour" does not introduce a new concept, as its English equivalent is exact there is no need for that ; however if there exists a particular context involving French culture you can do that; it was Edgar Allan Poe who could do that in his work and as a matter of fact in connection with French; he would put in whole sentences, as for instance in his short story "The Murders in The Rue Morgue".






share|improve this answer


























  • hmm I wasn't expecting it to be so drastically different for (1) I actually got it from herehttps://frenchtogether.com/french-love-quotes/ but tried to make a few adjustments so it would rhyme with bloomed on the 10th syllable and be on the 20th . what does the link actually say ( its the Madeleine de Scudery quote about a quarter down the page )

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago













  • also is there any way to express the sentence you gave with the restriction on rhyme I mentioned ?

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy I see one part of the problem; I thought "doucers" couldn't be anything eles than the adjective and the "missing "grandes" didn't help to clear out that erroneous deduction. I don't get your syllable count (don't understand it).

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy You can use this construction: " L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.", but of course you modify the quote.

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • on the tenth syllable of the sentence I want a long ooo sound like plus as this then rhyme with bloomed, on the twentieth syllable of the sentence I want an eeee seound like vie , so it rhymes with be

    – can'tcauchy
    1 hour ago














2












2








2







"1)" is correct;



I wonder whether "make for" wouldn't be a more appropriate verb; it correspond fairly well to the choice I made in French : you couldn't use "faire" in French.



"Sans espoir de retour" is perfect.



Well, mixing languages is fine as long as there is a common understanding; first of all you have to be understood. As "sans espoir de retour" does not introduce a new concept, as its English equivalent is exact there is no need for that ; however if there exists a particular context involving French culture you can do that; it was Edgar Allan Poe who could do that in his work and as a matter of fact in connection with French; he would put in whole sentences, as for instance in his short story "The Murders in The Rue Morgue".






share|improve this answer















"1)" is correct;



I wonder whether "make for" wouldn't be a more appropriate verb; it correspond fairly well to the choice I made in French : you couldn't use "faire" in French.



"Sans espoir de retour" is perfect.



Well, mixing languages is fine as long as there is a common understanding; first of all you have to be understood. As "sans espoir de retour" does not introduce a new concept, as its English equivalent is exact there is no need for that ; however if there exists a particular context involving French culture you can do that; it was Edgar Allan Poe who could do that in his work and as a matter of fact in connection with French; he would put in whole sentences, as for instance in his short story "The Murders in The Rue Morgue".







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 1 hour ago









dimitris

7,2642628




7,2642628










answered 4 hours ago









LPHLPH

8,633421




8,633421













  • hmm I wasn't expecting it to be so drastically different for (1) I actually got it from herehttps://frenchtogether.com/french-love-quotes/ but tried to make a few adjustments so it would rhyme with bloomed on the 10th syllable and be on the 20th . what does the link actually say ( its the Madeleine de Scudery quote about a quarter down the page )

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago













  • also is there any way to express the sentence you gave with the restriction on rhyme I mentioned ?

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy I see one part of the problem; I thought "doucers" couldn't be anything eles than the adjective and the "missing "grandes" didn't help to clear out that erroneous deduction. I don't get your syllable count (don't understand it).

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy You can use this construction: " L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.", but of course you modify the quote.

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • on the tenth syllable of the sentence I want a long ooo sound like plus as this then rhyme with bloomed, on the twentieth syllable of the sentence I want an eeee seound like vie , so it rhymes with be

    – can'tcauchy
    1 hour ago



















  • hmm I wasn't expecting it to be so drastically different for (1) I actually got it from herehttps://frenchtogether.com/french-love-quotes/ but tried to make a few adjustments so it would rhyme with bloomed on the 10th syllable and be on the 20th . what does the link actually say ( its the Madeleine de Scudery quote about a quarter down the page )

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago













  • also is there any way to express the sentence you gave with the restriction on rhyme I mentioned ?

    – can'tcauchy
    4 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy I see one part of the problem; I thought "doucers" couldn't be anything eles than the adjective and the "missing "grandes" didn't help to clear out that erroneous deduction. I don't get your syllable count (don't understand it).

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • @can'tcauchy You can use this construction: " L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.", but of course you modify the quote.

    – LPH
    3 hours ago











  • on the tenth syllable of the sentence I want a long ooo sound like plus as this then rhyme with bloomed, on the twentieth syllable of the sentence I want an eeee seound like vie , so it rhymes with be

    – can'tcauchy
    1 hour ago

















hmm I wasn't expecting it to be so drastically different for (1) I actually got it from herehttps://frenchtogether.com/french-love-quotes/ but tried to make a few adjustments so it would rhyme with bloomed on the 10th syllable and be on the 20th . what does the link actually say ( its the Madeleine de Scudery quote about a quarter down the page )

– can'tcauchy
4 hours ago







hmm I wasn't expecting it to be so drastically different for (1) I actually got it from herehttps://frenchtogether.com/french-love-quotes/ but tried to make a few adjustments so it would rhyme with bloomed on the 10th syllable and be on the 20th . what does the link actually say ( its the Madeleine de Scudery quote about a quarter down the page )

– can'tcauchy
4 hours ago















also is there any way to express the sentence you gave with the restriction on rhyme I mentioned ?

– can'tcauchy
4 hours ago





also is there any way to express the sentence you gave with the restriction on rhyme I mentioned ?

– can'tcauchy
4 hours ago













@can'tcauchy I see one part of the problem; I thought "doucers" couldn't be anything eles than the adjective and the "missing "grandes" didn't help to clear out that erroneous deduction. I don't get your syllable count (don't understand it).

– LPH
3 hours ago





@can'tcauchy I see one part of the problem; I thought "doucers" couldn't be anything eles than the adjective and the "missing "grandes" didn't help to clear out that erroneous deduction. I don't get your syllable count (don't understand it).

– LPH
3 hours ago













@can'tcauchy You can use this construction: " L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.", but of course you modify the quote.

– LPH
3 hours ago





@can'tcauchy You can use this construction: " L'amour fait les plus douces et les plus sensibles infortunes de la vie.", but of course you modify the quote.

– LPH
3 hours ago













on the tenth syllable of the sentence I want a long ooo sound like plus as this then rhyme with bloomed, on the twentieth syllable of the sentence I want an eeee seound like vie , so it rhymes with be

– can'tcauchy
1 hour ago





on the tenth syllable of the sentence I want a long ooo sound like plus as this then rhyme with bloomed, on the twentieth syllable of the sentence I want an eeee seound like vie , so it rhymes with be

– can'tcauchy
1 hour ago










can'tcauchy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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