Mouth: englisch
Translational equivalents: England; English; English; Englishman
by transcript | by glosses | by right neighbours | by left neighbours
1245462 fra07 | 18-30m
If hearing people do not know one word and they don't know any English either, how do they communicate?
r RIGHT-OR-AGREED1^* WORD3* RIGHT-OR-AGREED1A ENGLAND4 CAN1* COMMUNICATION1A* HOW-QUESTION1*
l
m stimm{t} engl{isch} [MG] kom{munikation} wie
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
You can write it down in English.
r EASY1 ENGLAND4 TO-WRITE1A TO-WRITE-DIALOGUE1 ENGLAND4
l
m oder englisch englisch
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
You can write it down in English.
r ENGLAND4 TO-WRITE1A TO-WRITE-DIALOGUE1 ENGLAND4 TO-WRITE1A
l
m englisch englisch
1250972 mvp07 | 31-45f
That was smart content and teaching in English.
r SMART3 HIS-HER1* WITH1C ENGLAND4 LANGUAGE1 $GEST-OFF1^*
l
m … mit englisch sprache
1420216 ber14 | 18-30m
I also went to the public screening when Germany won against England 4:0.
r OR1* ENGLAND4 $NUM-RELATION1* INVOLVED1A TO-WATCH1*
l
m oder england vier null dabei
1248505 goe06 | 31-45f
Someday I want to visit England.
r SOMETIME1* TO-WANT7* I1 ENGLAND4 TO-DRIVE3*
l
m irgendwann will england
1585089 lei14 | 31-45m
He, towards the English guy/
r ON-PERSON1* $INDEX1* AMERICA1* ENGLAND4 $INDEX1 ON-PERSON1*
l
m auf a{merika} eng{länder}
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
There were some people from England as well.
r I1 TO-COME1* SUDDENLY4* ENGLAND4 ENGLAND3
l TO-COME1
m [MG] england england
1248505 goe06 | 31-45f
Both of my children have travelled to England already.
r CHILD2* BOTH2A* BEEN1* ENGLAND4 TO-DRIVE3*
l
m kinder beide gewesen england
1585089 lei14 | 31-45m
Somewhere in England.
r THERE1 $GEST-OFF1^ ENGLAND4 TO-BELONG1^*
l TO-BELONG1^*
m [MG] england
1291636 mst11 | 61+m
That’s how they did it. The English came at night.
r TO-BELONG1^* NIGHT2* TO-BELONG1^*
l ENGLAND4
m engländer nacht
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
But it’s obvious, though; it’s English!
r $INDEX1* ENGLAND4* CLEAR1A* ENGLAND4 $INDEX2
l
m e{nglisch} klar englisch
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
Well, English.
r ENGLAND4 $INDEX2
l
m englisch
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
Like DGS in Germany, you use BSL in England, and ASL in the U.S.
r DGS1 BSL1 ENGLAND4 TO-SIGN1A* ENGLAND4
l TO-BELONG1* TO-BELONG1* TO-BELONG1^
m d-g-s b-s-l england england
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
It’s from England.
r BUT1* ENGLAND4* ENGLAND3* ENGLAND4
l $INDEX1 $INDEX1* $INDEX1* HIS-HER1
m ja e{ngland} england
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
Like DGS in Germany, you use BSL in England, and ASL in the U.S.
r ENGLAND4 TO-SIGN1A* ENGLAND4 AMERICA1* ASL1 AMERICA1*
l TO-BELONG1* TO-BELONG1^
m england england amerika a-s-l amerika
1184756 nue04 | 18-30f
On Sunday, Germany won four to one against England. That was awesome!
r SUNDAY2* GERMAN1 AGAINST3C ENGLAND4 $NUM-RELATION1* REMARKABLE1
l
m sonntag deutschland england vier eins [MG]
1184749 nue04 | 18-30f
Take, for example, the time. It's confusing in England.
r EXAMPLE1* CLOCK1 HIS-HER1 ENGLAND4 TO-BE-CONFUSED1
l
m beispiel uhr england [MG]
1184749 nue04 | 18-30f
… England.
r ENGLAND4
l
m england
1184749 nue04 | 18-30f
The U.S. tour, England.
r AMERICA1* VACATION8B $INDEX2 ENGLAND4 $LIST1:2of2*
l
m amerika england
1205168 mue08 | 18-30f
During the match against Argentina I was most thrilled. Or was it against England?
r ARGENTINA3* NO1A* ENGLAND4
l $INDEX1
m argentinien england
1205168 mue08 | 18-30f
Right, against England.
r ENGLAND4 AGAINST3C^
l
m england
1413703 ber02 | 46-60m
For instance, there was this one very famous badminton player from England who won matches over and over again.
r TO-REMEMBER3B BADMINTON-SPORT1 WELL-KNOWN1B ENGLAND4 A-MOMENT-AGO1A^* TO-WIN1 OLYMPIA1
l $INDEX1*
m badminton bekannt england [MG]
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
I personally believe it should be in England.
r TO-BELIEVE2B BETTER1 $INDEX1 ENGLAND4
l
m glaub besser england
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
It should rather be in England, because you learn English as a second language at school.
r RATHER1 ENGLAND4 ALREADY1A BEFORE1B
l $INDEX1
m lieber england schon vor
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
It should rather be in England, because you learn English as a second language at school.
r TO-GROW-UP1A* $NUM-ORDINAL1:2 LANGUAGE1 ENGLAND4
l
m zweitsprache englisch
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
That's why I think it should rather be in England to ensure the same conditions for everyone.
r RATHER1* ENGLAND4 ALL2A* EQUAL1A
l $INDEX1
m lieber england alle gleich
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
But England would be better.
r ENGLAND4 $INDEX1 BETTER1*
l
m england besser
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
There is the University of Oxford in England which would be the better uni.
r ENGLAND4 EXAMPLE1 $ALPHA1:O-X-F-O-R-D BETTER1
l $INDEX1
m england beispiel oxford besser
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
But I do think England would be the better choice.
r I2 TO-KNOW-STH2B^ BETTER1 ENGLAND4
l
m [MG] besser england
1418858 ber07 | 31-45m
The two interpreters took the English lyrics and translated them into German in order to interpret them into German Sign Language.
r HERE1* SINGER2 ENGLAND4 HERE1 TO-CHANGE2A* $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:2*
l
m hier sänger englisch um zwei
1290581 mst06 | 31-45m
I communicated in English, they usually know how to speak that.
r I1 ENGLAND4* ENGLAND4 TO-WRITE2E* PRIMARILY1 AREA1A^*
l
m [MG] englisch [MG]
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
In English.
r ENGLAND4
l
m englisch
1290581 mst06 | 31-45m
They also have a complicated writing system and there’s barely any English.
r MUCH1B* INCOMPREHENSIBLE-SCRAWL1 RARELY2 ENGLAND4
l
m viel selten englisch
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
Right, the original soundtrack is in English.
r RIGHT-OR-AGREED1B* ENGLAND4* SOUND2* ENGLAND4
l $INDEX1 $INDEX1* $INDEX1*
m … ton englisch
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
In Japan English movies or movies from other foreign countries are captioned.
r JAPAN1* $INDEX1 ENGLAND4 MOVIE1* ABROAD2 JAPAN1*
l $INDEX1 $INDEX1
m japan engl{isch} film ausland
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
It’s the same due to all those British colonies.
r $INDEX1* SIMILAR1* TO-GRAB4^* ENGLAND4 TO-GRAB4^*
l
m [MG] kolo{nie} besetz england [MG]
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
There was this woman from England who was from around London.
r WOMAN1A FROM1 ENGLAND4 ENGLAND4* WOMAN1A REALLY2*
l $INDEX1
m frau england frau
1427368 koe02 | 46-60m
Let’s say, I was able to speak and write English well, then it wouldn’t be difficult for me to go there to study and graduate.
r EXAMPLE2 $GEST-OFF1^ I1* ENGLAND4 GOOD1 TO-SPEAK5A ENGLAND4*
l
m zum beispiel wenn englisch gut [MG] englisch
1177436 sh04 | 46-60f
I’d like to ask you, can they speak German or English in the US?
r GERMAN1 TO-SPEAK4* OR1* ENGLAND4 $GEST-OFF1^*
l
m deutsch sprechen oder englisch
1177436 sh04 | 46-60f
No, it has to be English.
r ENGLAND4 MUST1
l
m englisch muss
1177436 sh04 | 46-60f
Yes, that’s if everything works out with the language.
r ATTENTION1A^* MEANING1* $INDEX1 ENGLAND4 IT-WORKS-OUT1 $INDEX1 $INDEX1
l
m … bedeut englisch klappt [MG]
1177436 sh04 | 46-60f
What helped was reading a lot of newspaper articles about the collapse of the twin towers; that way his knowledge of English improved.
r MORE5 TO-UNDERSTAND1* $INDEX1 ENGLAND4 $INDEX1
l
m mehr mehr verstanden englisch
1413485 ber01 | 18-30m
She was the best and nicest queen England ever had.
r FOR1^* KING1A*
l $ALPHA1:D-N-A PERSON1^ ENGLAND4* PERSON1
m diana england könig
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
The other person doesn't know English very well either.
r NOT3A* ALSO3A* GOOD1* ENGLAND4*
l
m … auch gut englisch
1582654 lei03 | 18-30m
Yes, English, math, and German.
r $LIST1:1of1d* ENGLAND4* $LIST1:2of2d MATHEMATHICS1B* $LIST1:3of3d
l
m englisch mathe
1413683 ber02 | 46-60m
Then, we received stamped documents from America, France, and England.
r TO-TAKE1A^ $LIST1:2of2d FRANCE3A* ENGLAND4* $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:3d STAMP1^
l $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:3d
m … frankreich england
1582439 lei02 | 61+f
Her boyfriend's father had a company somewhere in England.
r $INDEX1 STORE1* PARENTS6A* ENGLAND4* SOMEWHERE1* STORE1 SOMEWHERE1*
l
m geschäft eltern england geschäft
1585089 lei14 | 31-45m
Vitali was competing against that English guy.
r $ALPHA1:V AGAINST3A* ENGLAND4* $INDEX1 TO-BOX1
l
m vitali gegen england
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
From England.
r ENGLAND4*
l
m england
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
Everyone learns English in advance.
r ALL2A BEFORE1D TO-LEARN1 ENGLAND4*
l
m alle schon vor lernen englisch
1427368 koe02 | 46-60m
The members of the German Church signed a petition and sent it to the Queen of England.
r TO-SEND-OR-TO-DISPATCH2* KING1A* $INDEX1 ENGLAND4* HIS-HER1* COGNITION1^ $GEST^
l
m … kön{igin} england könig{in}
1248505 goe06 | 31-45f
I only understood half of it due to my limited English skills.
r I2* ENGLAND4* TO-UNDERSTAND1* HALF1B TO-UNDERSTAND1*
l
m englisch halb verstehen
1248941-… goe08 | 18-30f
Yes, English.
r ENGLAND4* $INDEX1*
l
m englisch
1247199 fra16 | 31-45f
It’s in a closed cabinet in England.
r ENGLAND4* $INDEX4 CUPBOARD1* TO-SLIDE-IN6^*
l
m england schrank im
1177918 sh05 | 61+m
If England is playing against the U.S., I'm not interested.
r WHO2 ENGLAND4* AGAINST3B* USA2 I1
l
m wer england u{-s-a}
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
But it’s obvious, though; it’s English!
r $GEST-OFF1^* $INDEX1* ENGLAND4* CLEAR1A* ENGLAND4 $INDEX2
l
m e{nglisch} klar englisch
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
It’s from England.
r BUT1* ENGLAND4* ENGLAND3* ENGLAND4
l $INDEX1 $INDEX1* $INDEX1* HIS-HER1
m ja e{ngland} england
1413485 ber01 | 18-30m
For example in England, Sweden, Finland and Norway.
r EXAMPLE1* $LIST1:2of2d SWEDEN1A $LIST1:2of2d
l $GEST-TO-PONDER1^ ENGLAND4*
m zum bei{spiel} england schweden
1184756 nue04 | 31-45m
She looked for a piece of paper, and then we just communicated with each other by writing while simultaneously watching the game.
r GOOD3* I1* TO-WRITE1A* ENGLAND4* TO-LOOK-AWAY-AND-BACK1* TO-LOOK-AWAY-AND-BACK1^* TO-WRITE1B*
l $GEST^
m okay [MG] england
1205168 mue08 | 18-30f
England/
r LIKE-THIS1^* ENGLAND4* I1
l
m england ich
1211515 stu04 | 61+m
But it was also said that they wouldn’t be able to offer additional English and French classes specifically for me.
r TO-SAY1 LIKE1A* I1 ENGLAND4* STH-OR-SLIGHTLY3A FRANCE4* TO-TEACH3^*
l
m wie englisch französisch
1433543 mue07 | 18-30m
One can walk through the English garden.
r ENGLAND4* GARDEN2 TO-GO-FOR-A-WALK1 ENGLAND4*
l
m englisch garten spazieren englisch
1433543 mue07 | 18-30m
One can walk through the English garden.
r ENGLAND4* GARDEN2 TO-GO-FOR-A-WALK1 ENGLAND4* GARDEN2* $GEST^
l
m englisch garten spazieren englisch garten
1290581 mst06 | 31-45m
I communicated in English, they usually know how to speak that.
r I1 ENGLAND4* ENGLAND4 TO-WRITE2E* PRIMARILY1
l
m [MG] englisch [MG]
1290581 mst06 | 31-45m
I communicated in English, they usually know how to speak that.
r TO-WRITE2E* PRIMARILY1 AREA1A^* ENGLAND4*
l
m … [MG] englisch
1290581 mst06 | 31-45m
In China, English is spoken less often, there’s more of the complicated Chinese ideographs.
r BUT1* CHINA2* HARDLY1* ENGLAND4* MUCH1C* INCOMPREHENSIBLE-SCRAWL1* $GEST^
l
m aber china [MG] englisch viel [MG]
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
Right, the original soundtrack is in English.
r RIGHT-OR-AGREED1B* RIGHT-OR-AGREED1B* ENGLAND4* SOUND2* ENGLAND4
l $INDEX1 $INDEX1* $INDEX1*
m [MG] ton englisch
1433543 mue07 | 18-30m
… in the English garden by the Chinese tower/
r $LIST1:2of2d* ENGLAND4* GARDEN2* CHINA1 TOWER1*
l
m englisch garten china turm
1433543 mue07 | 31-45m
The third one is in the English garden. These are the biggest ones.
r $LIST1:3of3d ENGLAND4* GARDEN2* $LIST1:3of3d $LIST1:4of4d
l
m englisch garten
1433543 mue07 | 31-45m
The biggest beer garden is the one in the English garden, I think.
r GARDEN2*
l MOST1A TO-BELIEVE2A* I1 ENGLAND4* $INDEX1
m glau{ben} englischer garten
1582654 lei03 | 18-30m
We communicated via written English on a piece of paper, and I found out about the speed and height we were traveling at.
r TALK1 ENGLAND4* TO-WRITE2A HOW-MUCH5* FAST3A
l I1 TO-WRITE2E*
m [MG] englisch [MG] wie schnell
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
Maybe, but they use BSL there, just like in England.
r BSL1 EQUAL8* ENGLAND4* $INDEX1*
l PRESENT-OR-HERE1
m b-s-l da [MG] england
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
I’ve never used it myself, though. If you are born and raised in England, you’re a pro at it.
r I1 LIKE1A* TO-GROW-UP1A* ENGLAND4* BIRTH1A I1* GENUINE1*
l
m … england geboren
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
I once had a couple of/
r BUT1* $INDEX1 ENGLAND4* $GEST-TO-PONDER1^* $GEST-TO-PONDER1^* BEEN1
l $INDEX1
m aber gew{esen}
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
There was this woman from England who was from around London.
r WOMAN1A FROM1 ENGLAND4 ENGLAND4* WOMAN1A REALLY2* APARTMENT1A*
l
m frau england frau wohn
1427368 koe02 | 46-60m
Let’s say, I was able to speak and write English well, then it wouldn’t be difficult for me to go there to study and graduate.
r ENGLAND4 GOOD1 TO-SPEAK5A ENGLAND4* GOOD1* TO-WRITE2C* TO-POINT-AT1*
l
m englisch gut [MG] englisch gut [MG]
1177436 sh04 | 46-60f
First you go there and they’ll check whether your English is sufficient.
r TO-GO-THERE1* EXAMINATION2B* $INDEX1 ENGLAND4* GOOD1
l
m [MG] ob englisch gut
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
Even though, her mouthing was in English.
r $INDEX1* SELF1A* STILL4B* ENGLAND4* LANGUAGE2* $INDEX1* MOUTH1A^*
l $INDEX1
m … selbst noch englisch sprache sprechen
1433543 mue07 | 18-30m
In the English garden, one can go surfing in the Eisbach [lit.: ice brook; man-made river]. That’s really famous.
r ENGLAND4* GARDEN2* CAN1 TO-SURF1*
l
m englisch garten kann surfen