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  • Term: translators latin
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    translators latin!


    translators latin

    Comprehensive Analysis



    1) "Translators" -- As to translators latin

    trans·late
    Pronunciation: tran(t)s-'lAt, tranz-; 'tran(t)s-"lAt, 'tranz-
    Function: verb
    Inflected Form(s): trans·lat·ed; trans·lat·ing
    Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French translater, from Latin translatus (past participle of transferre to transfer, translate), from trans- + latus, past participle of ferre to carry -- more at TOLERATE, BEAR
    transitive verb
    1 a : to bear, remove, or change from one place, state, form, or appearance to another : TRANSFER, TRANSFORM <a country boy translated to the city> <translate ideas into action> b : to convey to heaven or to a nontemporal condition without death c : to transfer (a bishop) from one see to another
    2 a : to turn into one's own or another language b : to transfer or turn from one set of symbols into another : TRANSCRIBE c (1) : to express in different terms and especially different words : PARAPHRASE (2) : to express in more comprehensible terms : EXPLAIN, INTERPRET
    3 : ENRAPTURE
    4 : to subject to mathematical translation
    5 : to subject (as genetic information) to translation in protein synthesis
    intransitive verb
    1 : to practice translation or make a translation; also : to admit of or be adaptable to translation <a word that doesn't translate easily>
    2 : to undergo a translation
    3 : LEAD, RESULT -- usually used with into <believes that tax cuts will translate into economic growth>
    - trans·lat·abil·i·ty /(")tran(t)s-"lA-t&-'bi-l&-tE, (")tranz-/ noun
    - trans·lat·able /tran(t)s-'lA-t&-b&a
    For article translations in Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Translation.
    • 1 The term and the concept
    • 2 Misconceptions
    • 3 Interpreting
    • 4 The process
    • 5 Measuring success
    • 6 Equivalence
    • 7 Problems
      • 7.1 General
      • 7.2 "Untranslatability"
      • 7.3 Common words
    • 8 Specialized translation
      • 8.1 Commercial translation
      • 8.2 Computer translation
      • 8.3 Video-game translation
      • 8.4 General translation
      • 8.5 Legal translation
      • 8.6 Literary translation
      • 8.7 Medical translation
      • 8.8 Pedagogic translation
      • 8.9 Scientific translation
      • 8.10 Scholarly translation
      • 8.11 Technical translation
      • 8.12 Dubbing and subtitling
    • 9 History
      • 9.1 General history
      • 9.2 Religious texts
    • 10 Trends
      • 10.1 Machine translation
      • 10.2 Computer assist
      • 10.3 Cultural translation
    • 11 See also
      • 11.1 General
      • 11.2 Theory
      • 11.3 Noted translators
    • 12 Footnotes
    • 13 References
    • 14 External links
      • 1..."


        2) "Latin" -- As to translators latin

        1Lat·in
        Pronunciation: 'la-t&n
        Function: adjective
        Etymology: Middle English, from Old English, from Latin Latinus, from Latium, ancient country of Italy
        1 a : of, relating to, or composed in Latin b : ROMANCE
        2 : of or relating to Latium or the Latins
        3 : of or relating to the part of the Catholic Church that until recently used a Latin rite and forms the patriarchate of the pope
        4 : of or relating to the peoples or countries using Romance languages; specifically : of or relating to the peoples or countries of Latin America
        Pronunciation Symbols

        Latin
        lingua latina 
        Pronunciation: IPA: /ˈlætɪn/
        Spoken in: Vatican City 
        Region: Italian Peninsula and Europe
        Language extinction: Late Latin developed into various Romance languages by the 6th century
        Language family: Indo-European
         Italic
          Latino-Faliscan
           Latin 
        Official status
        Official language of: Vatican City
        Used for official purposes, but not spoken in everyday speech
        Regulated by: no official regulation
        Language codes
        ISO 639-1: la
        ISO 639-2: lat
        ISO 639-3: lat