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Difference between revisions of "User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 33r"
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− | 🛠️{{par|r}} If I now attempt to lift your elbow | + | 🛠️{{par|r}} If I now attempt to lift/take the dagger near your elbow, |
You will truly see that you have been deprived by the sudden ascension<ref>Subito has two meanings that both seem relevant here ("suddenly, immediately" and "going under, going upward"), and there's no way to tell if only one is intended, so we have used both.</ref>. | You will truly see that you have been deprived by the sudden ascension<ref>Subito has two meanings that both seem relevant here ("suddenly, immediately" and "going under, going upward"), and there's no way to tell if only one is intended, so we have used both.</ref>. | ||
− | Illa | + | Illa remains a problem |
</poem> | </poem> | ||
<noinclude>{{reflist}} | <noinclude>{{reflist}} | ||
[[file:MS Latin 11269 33r.jpg|900px]]</noinclude> | [[file:MS Latin 11269 33r.jpg|900px]]</noinclude> |
Revision as of 20:14, 8 July 2025
Latin 33r
¶ Taliter ipse[1] tuam convolvam turbine dagam /
Quod tibi sive vetes[2] capiam / tu sive repugnes.
¶ Si prope[3] nunc cubitum dagam tibi tollere tento,
Illa te subito privatum nempe videbis.
Italian
I will make your dagger do a turn, |
[10a-a] A la tua daga faro far una volta, |
If I lift your dagger behind your elbow, |
[10a-b] Si io levo la tua daga per apresso tuo cubito |
English 33r
✅¶ In this way, I myself will twist your dagger away with a whirling motion,
I will seize what belongs to you, whether you prohibit it or YOU fight back
🛠️¶ If I now attempt to lift/take the dagger near your elbow,
You will truly see that you have been deprived by the sudden ascension[4].
Illa remains a problem
- ↑ Added later: "scilicet ego".
- ↑ This looks like it may have originally said “veter” but was corrected to “vetes” (e.g. from first person present passive to second active present).
- ↑ See Capelli 285; this can be read as either prope (near) or proprie (specifically).
- ↑ Subito has two meanings that both seem relevant here ("suddenly, immediately" and "going under, going upward"), and there's no way to tell if only one is intended, so we have used both.