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Thanks! I'm using the familiar forms in Urdu and Bengali, as I thought the polite form could be too distancing for trying to express solidarity. I will change the Hindi to match. Maybe I should use the polite forms though?
Thanks for the translation. This is intended specifically to show solidarity with Muslims though so for the moment I might not add it.
I think āp is safer, as it's always respectful, and that seems appropriate if it's a message from outside the community. (But if you know a Hindi/Urdu speaker, ask them.)
Yeah that's pretty much exactly how I did it , except the Somali took a lot more digging than the others.
I wasn't sure if it needed the -lar- or not, and it just seems slightly lacking to my English-speaking perception without the separate pronoun
Great point. If you don't mind asking mèþru that would be much appreciated! I figure that the Dari will be similar enough (or even identical) to the Farsi that it is largely unnecessary. I also assumed that the Persian makes a Pashto translation unnecessary as well.mèþru wrote: ↑Sun Mar 24, 2019 9:11 pm I'd also go with आप. I'll ask one of my Hindi-speaking acquaintances. I know a native speaker of Persian so I can clear that translation up with her. I don't speak Arabic but using Wiktionary + Hebrew + intuition I think that your translation is not only accurate but the Google given one is worse then yours.
I also know a native speaker of Dari if you want a translation in it.
Textbooks for Hindi and Urdu use haĩ, and maybe that's the best choice for a poster, but people do also say āp (...) ho. A few examples I just found:
It's very provoking when people refuse to speak like the textbooks.Vijay wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2019 12:54 pmTextbooks for Hindi and Urdu use haĩ, and maybe that's the best choice for a poster, but people do also say āp (...) ho. A few examples I just found:
Āp kaise ho? 'How are you?'
Jab āp smile karte ho na, mujhe bahut acchha lagta hai. 'I like it a lot when you smile.'
Āp hamse itna chiṛhte kyõ ho? 'Why are you so mad at me?'