Mouth: beide
Translational equivalents: both; both
by transcript | by glosses | by right neighbours | by left neighbours
1429964 koe14 | 61+f
The oldest child was happy, though the age gap was twelve years.
r HAPPY1* $NUM-TEEN2B:2d* $INDEX1* BOTH1
l $INDEX1
m froh zwölf jahre unterschied zwölf jahre
1204694 mue01 | 61+f
If the two of us went to the senior meet-up now and again, that would make them happy.
r AFTERWARDS1A^ BOTH1 TO-VISIT-OR-TO-ATTEND1B AFTERWARDS1A^ TO-MEET1*
l
m wenn ich wir senioren [MG] [MG]
1584198 lei10 | 31-45m
So, parents should get notified about their child’s progress. That way they might be able to catch up and thus might aid the child’s growth.
r COUPLE1 PARALLEL2* BOTH1 PARALLEL2 TO-PROMOTE1A
l $INDEX1
m … parallel
1585089 lei14 | 31-45m
The two of them arranged that they wanted to box against one another again.
r TO-ARRANGE1 $GEST-NM-NOD-HEAD1^* TO-BOX1 BOTH1
l
m ja
1182062 stu12 | 46-60f
I ask what he would like to get, like a pair of jeans, and I tell him what I’d recommend.
r
l TO-RECOMMEND1A $INDEX1* DOUBT1 BOTH1
m empfehlen [MG]
1179224 hh08 | 46-60f
That means, that the water is pumped via pipelines over the whole distance to the company?
r $ORAL^ TO-LINK1A BOTH1
l WATER1
m aber wasser
1179224 hh08 | 46-60f
Yes, that’s what I meant.
r BOTH1 OPINION1A MY3
l
m bismarck mein
1245462 fra07 | 18-30m
However, if you use the sign PARTNER, the interlocutor immediately understands that they are an item. In using this sign you will answer both question at once.
r PARTNER2* TO-COMPREHEND1 $GEST-OFF1^*
l TO-COMPREHEND1 $INDEX1 BOTH1
m
1582654 lei03 | 18-30m
Is it the same ASL as in the US?
r LIKE2* AMERICA1* OR4B* BOTH1
l
m wie amerika oder
1290126 mst04 | 31-45m
They wanted to travel from the GDR to Yugoslavia, which was a Soviet region back then.
r
l PAST-OR-BACK-THEN1 YUGOSLAVIA1 COMMUNISM1 BOTH1
m früh jugoslawien kommun{ismus}
1182062 stu12 | 46-60f
We could talk about our pregnancies, for instance.
r EXAMPLE2* BOTH1* PREGNANT2* BOTH2A* PREGNANT2*
l YOU1
m beispiel schwangerschaft schwangerschaft
1429964 koe14 | 61+f
The age gap between the first and the second child is two years.
r DEAF1A YEAR1B* $INDEX1* BOTH1* FIRST-OF-ALL1A* $NUM-ORDINAL1:2d*
l $INDEX1
m gehörlos zwei jahre unterschied erste zweite
1429964 koe14 | 61+f
Exactly two years.
r YEAR1B* BOTH1*
l
m zwei jahre unterschied
1291636 mst11 | 61+m
Using sign language.
r TO-SIGN1G* BOTH1* $GEST-OFF1^
l
m
1583950 lei09 | 31-45f
They both knew that it wasn’t a good idea to have me surrounded by hearing people only.
r BOTH1* $INDEX1 HEARING1A AREA1B^*
l
m hörend
1429964 koe14 | 61+f
They played with each other.
r TO-PLAY2* BOTH1*
l
m spielen zusammen
1249376 goe10 | 46-60m
A friendship in which no information was being published.
r TO-LINK1B^* FRIEND4 BOTH1* PUBLIC1A NOT3A $GEST-OFF1^*
l
m {freund}schaft öffentlich [MG]
1429964 koe14 | 61+f
I have two deaf daughters and my husband and I are deaf as well.
r BOTH1* DEAF1A* DAUGHTER1* I1*
l $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:2d
m warum zwei töchter
1290996-… mst08 | 61+f
When the men ran down the staircase, they were surprised by a man who was an ally of the perpetrator.
r MAN9 SURPRISE1A* ASSOCIATION1A BOTH1*
l
m mann bund
1181397 stu08 | 61+f
His wife, my cousin, taught younger children.
r OUTDOORS1A^ COUSIN-FEMALE3* $INDEX1
l I1 HIS-HER1 BOTH1* I1
m frau cousine
1210825 mue13 | 46-60m
I asked whether they really were like me, and she said yes.
r I1 EQUAL1A BOTH1* HEAD-NOD1*
l
m ich gleich ja
1212176 fra05 | 46-60m
I often saw hearing children there who were younger than me and with whom I could play.
r CHILD2* I1 ONLY2A* BOTH1* COME-HERE1 TO-PLAY1*
l
m kinder spielen
1414123 ber04 | 46-60m
I only started to become aware of the differences in sign language because I moved from Karlsruhe to Berlin; for example, I only knew one sign for all the days of the week.
r TO-SIGN1A BOTH1* DIFFERENCE1C* BIG3A DIFFERENCE1C
l I1 $INDEX1*
m karlsruhe groß unterschiedlich
1209495-… nue08 | 18-30f
The two of us are together at boarding school, we’re in the same class, we have the same friends, everything is the same.
r TO-RING-BELL2^ TO-ACCOMPANY1A^ EQUAL1A* BOTH1*
l
m pause gleich gleich
1290359-… mst05 | 61+f
Hearing, deaf and hard of hearing people can't really communicate well with each other.
r $GEST^ DEAF1A* HARD-OF-HEARING1* BOTH1* GOOD1* TO-UNDERSTAND1*
l
m gehörlos schwer{hörige} bei{de} gut verstehen
1419265 ber09 | 18-30f
The relationship is completely normal, though.
r BUT1* BOTH1* TOGETHER-PERSON1 $GEST^ RELATIONSHIP3*
l
m beziehung
1187152 nue06 | 31-45f
I’ll visit you, you live closer to it.
r I2 TO-VISIT-OR-TO-ATTEND1A* CLOSE-BY1B* BOTH1* I1 TO-VISIT-OR-TO-ATTEND1A*
l
m [MG] nahe [MG]
1585089 lei14 | 31-45m
It looked pretty dangerous, both of them charged up like that.
r TO-SEE1* VERY7* TENSION4B* BOTH1*
l
m … spannung
1431277-… koe20 | 31-45m
Someone told me that there are always two of them.
r $INDEX1 TO-SIGN1A* BOTH1*
l $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:2
m erzählt zwei
1177860 sh05 | 61+m
When you are done with the submarine, that’s good for the two of us:
r SUBMARINE1* I1 TO-MATCH1 BOTH1*
l
m u-boot passt
1244796 fra02 | 31-45m
What I find interesting as well is that ASL is more similar to its spoken equivalent.
r WORD3* BIT2A* CLOSE-BY1A BOTH1*
l $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:2*
m bisschen nah
1205168 mue08 | 18-30f
Because Germany and the Netherlands are big rivals.
r BOTH1* HOLLAND1* REASON4B HOLLAND1
l
m ho{lland} grund holland
1179390-… sh01 | 18-30m
Neither the poor nor the rich are responsible for such a gap, but the government and its heads.
r BOTH1* LIKE3A* $GEST-OFF1^* $INDEX1*
l $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:2*
m wie
1245390 fra04 | 61+m
For both of us, it got clearer then.
r BOTH1* CLEAR1A*
l
m klar
1292545 mst15 | 31-45f
It means that we'll continue to keep in touch, as well.
r $INDEX1* MEANING1* BOTH1* TOGETHER-PERSON1^* FURTHER1A* CONTACT2A*
l
m bedeutet weiter weiter weiter kontakt
1584198 lei10 | 31-45m
My colleague from work who I get along with well did not know how to sign at all.
r TO-WORK2* FRIEND7 I1 BOTH1* GOOD1 PERSON1* REGULAR2A
l $INDEX1
m arbeitskollege stamm
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
We sometimes use our private signs and then are looked at weirdly.
r DIFFERENCE4^ WE2* $ORAL^ BOTH1* PRIVATE1A* TALK3* TO-SIGN1A*
l
m manchmal wie unter{halten} privat gebärden
1182062 stu12 | 46-60f
We fight a lot then.
r ALWAYS5A* TO-ARGUE1A
l BOTH1*
m immer streiten
1184756 nue04 | 31-45m
They were both from California.
r ITALY1^* BOTH2A* FRIEND8
l BOTH1*
m … beide freundin{nen}
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
You can't see if someone is deaf.
r TO-SEE1* BOTH1* DEAF1A NOT3B LIKE-THIS1^
l
m man sieht gehörlos nicht an
1583950 lei09 | 31-45f
But we still had another child, and it surely was good for them to have one another to play with.
r RIGHT-OR-AGREED1A TO-PLAY2 ADVANTAGE1 BOTH1* RIGHT-OR-AGREED1A
l
m stimmt spielen [MG] stimmt
1245356 fra04 | 61+m
A shame that you two couldn’t be there.
r BOTH1* INVOLVED1A* YOU-PLURAL1A* TOO-BAD1*
l
m dabei schade
1429124-… koe10 | 18-30m
That means they beat each other. I thought it ended in a tie.
r WAS1 TO-BEAT1* TO-BE-CALLED1B* BOTH1* DIFFERENCE1A $INDEX1
l
m war [MG] heißt klar unentschieden
1209495-… nue08 | 18-30f
Those relationships work well.
r GOOD1 CONTACT2B* BOTH1*
l
m [MG]
1248505 goe06 | 31-45f
Nobody knows if it was real love.
r BUT1* $ALPHA1:D* BOTH1* REALLY1* $GEST-TO-PONDER1^* TO-PUT-IN3^
l $GEST-ATTENTION1^
m aber
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
We wanted to share the costs for the gas, but it was a Polo.
r BOTH1* TO-PART-TO-CHOP2^* TOGETHER1A* BUT1*
l
m beide aufteile aber
1427368 koe02 | 46-60m
And secondly, let’s say a man and a woman are married.
r ALSO1A* $LIST1:2of2d* ATTENTION1A^* BOTH1* ALREADY1A* TO-MARRY4* BOTH1*
l
m auch zweite beide schon verheiratet
1427368 koe02 | 46-60m
And secondly, let’s say a man and a woman are married.
r BOTH1* ALREADY1A* TO-MARRY4* BOTH1*
l
m beide schon verheiratet
1427368 koe02 | 46-60m
And they want to sleep with each other to have a baby.
r $INDEX1* TO-WISH1B* $INDEX1* BOTH1* $INDEX1* TO-SLEEP1A* $INDEX1*
l
m wenn wünsch schlaf
1184749 nue04 | 31-45m
I tried to read lips to get what they said.
r HELLO1* $INDEX1 TO-SPEAK3* BOTH1*
l
m hallo [MG]
1176846 sh03 | 46-60f
They love each other.
r HE-SHE-IT1 $INDEX1 LOVE1B BOTH1* $GEST-DECLINE1^
l
m liebe [MG]
1212176 fra05 | 46-60f
I improved and by knowing the words it was easier to talk to my sister.
r TO-SIGN1E MY1 SISTER1C BOTH1*
l
m meine schwester
1204877 mue03 | 61+m
First of all, about my brother; I get along with him well.
r MY1 BROTHER1A* TO-SPEAK3 BOTH1*
l
m bruder [MG]
1204877 mue03 | 61+m
We get along well, but we speak to each other.
r TO-DISCUSS1* BOTH1* GOOD1 TO-SAY1 TO-SPEAK3*
l
m gut [MG]
1290359-… mst05 | 61+f
I'd just say both.
r TO-SAY1* I2* EASY1 BOTH1* $GEST-OFF1^*
l
m einfach beide
1429124-… koe10 | 18-30m
That’s why I would like it better if we just had one match at home and one away match in turn.
r TO-SAY2B* LIKE3B* BOTH1* RATHER1 $GEST-TO-PONDER1^ I1*
l
m darum wie lieber ich
1429124-… koe10 | 18-30m
That’s why I would like it better if we just had one match at home and one away match in turn.
r OUTWARDS1* OUTWARDS1* HOME7 BOTH1* WHATEVER3*
l
m auswärts oder heim egal
1184536 nue03 | 31-45m
It's not for you and me.
r $GEST-DECLINE1^ BOTH1* $GEST-OFF1^
l I1 POSSIBLE1*
m [MG]
1184536 nue03 | 31-45m
If the two of us were younger, we wouldn’t know a language, yet, and could learn it naturally.
r BOTH1* TO-THINK1A* BIRTH1A* SMALL3*
l
m [MG]
1184536 nue03 | 31-45m
But our language is already embedded in our heads now, and it’s too late to relearn.
r BOTH1* ALREADY1A* OLD9* ALREADY1A
l
m schon alt schon
1419265 ber09 | 18-30f
And the two of us could come to agreement.”
r BOTH1* I1 CAN2B* TO-ARRANGE1*
l
m kann
1177436 sh04 | 46-60f
We have to endure it.
r BOTH1* TO-ACCEPT-STH3B
l
m [MG] [MG]
1419265 ber09 | 18-30f
With that arrangement, both of them can meet up with other people.
r BUT1 I1* BOTH1*
l HUSBAND1
m mann aber [MG] [MG]
1582654 lei03 | 18-30m
However, he told me I had to figure it out myself.
r
l $GEST^* SELF2* BOTH1*
m selbst [MG]
1582654 lei03 | 18-30m
Yes, just like the US.
r LIKE2* LIKE2*
l USA1 BOTH1*
m wie usa wie
1290754 mst07 | 46-60m
We were similar and adapted to one another.
r I1 BOTH1* TO-ADJUST1^* BOTH1* $GEST-OFF1^
l
m gleich
1290754 mst07 | 46-60m
We were similar and adapted to one another.
r I1 BOTH1* TO-ADJUST1^* BOTH1* $GEST-OFF1^
l
m gleich
1290126 mst04 | 31-45m
The two of them stayed in contact.
r CONTACT2A
l STILL5 BOTH1*
m noch kontakt
1212176 fra05 | 46-60m
My father called the head master/
r $INDEX1 FATHER1* PHONE1 BOTH1* HEADMASTER2*
l
m vater [MG] direktor
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
How do you guys communicate?
r EXAMPLE1^ TOGETHER-PERSON2A^* COMMUNICATION1B BOTH1*
l
m [MG] wie
1413251 stu07 | 31-45m
We already talked about that and we think that the word/
r BEFOREHAND1A I1 BOTH1* TO-DISCUSS1 ALREADY1A I1
l
m vorher schon
1177436 sh04 | 46-60f
For example there’s no chance to communicate with other deaf people.
r EXAMPLE1 DEAF1A BOTH1* COMMUNICATION1A*
l
m beispiel komm{unikation}
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
They are four, three, two years apart and grew up together.
r $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:2d* $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:1* HALF6* BOTH1* $GEST-NM-NOD-HEAD1^ TO-GROW-UP1B* ATTENTION1A^*
l
m zwei{ein}halb [MG]
1182062 stu12 | 46-60f
My son and I went there by train last week.
r SON1* TO1 TRAIN2B* REFLEX1B^
l WITH1B MY1 BOTH1*
m mit mein sohn zug s-bahn
1582654 lei03 | 18-30m
We are two good players in that position.
r ALTERNATION1
l $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:2d ALSO1A GOOD1 BOTH1*
m zwei auch gut [MG]
1427368 koe02 | 46-60m
Well, then we both went there.
r $GEST-DECLINE1^ BOTH1* TO-VISIT-OR-TO-ATTEND1A
l
m [MG]
1427368 koe02 | 46-60m
The doctor and I always had nice conversations and made jokes with each other.
r PHYSICIAN1* TO-SIGN1A TO-SEE1 BOTH1* TO-SPEAK5A* GOOD1*
l
m arzt gebärden verstehen auf auf auf auf [MG]
1584617 lei12 | 61+f
“I see! You look so much alike! Give him my regards!”
r TO-LET1* FACE1* BOTH1* TO-LET1* TO-GREET1 FINISH1
l
m ach so so ähnlich ach so schönen gruß
Mouth: wir
Translational equivalents: we; we; we
by transcript | by glosses | by right neighbours | by left neighbours
1187152 nue06 | 31-45f
When would you like to meet up?
r WHEN2* WE2 TO-MEET1
l
m wann wollen wir treffen
1584855 lei13 | 46-60m
Someone said that we were free now and we were allowed to cross the border and change money.
r TO-SAY1* FALL-OF-THE-BERLIN-WALL2 I1 WE2 WEST1B FREE1 $INDEX1*
l
m mauerfall wir westen frei
1245356 fra04 | 61+m
I used to speak Bulgarian with my grandma, but I wasn’t good at it.
r ALSO3A I2* WE2 I1* TO-SAY1^* GOOD1*
l
m oma ich spricht nicht gut
1179868 hb06 | 31-45f
Typical, we go on vacation and outside it's hailing like crazy.
r $GEST-I-DONT-KNOW1^ I1* ALTHOUGH1 WE2 TO-DRIVE3* OF-ALL-THINGS2 $INDEX1
l
m … obwohl ausgerechnet
1183203 stu15 | 61+f
Well, I then have to think about how all of us deaf people went to boarding school as children, how we all used sign language with each other and how good we felt.
r $INDEX1 PAST-OR-BACK-THEN2 GREEN8^ WE2 CHILD2* TO-MEET2A TO-SIGN1B
l
m … früher wir als kinder
1429781-… koe13 | 61+f
One can only ask, “How are you? Everything’s alright?”
r $GEST-OFF1^ GOOD1*
l ONLY2A WE2 HOW-ARE-YOU1*
m nur [MG] wie gehts gut
1292086 mst13 | 46-60f
Unfortunately, we fought like this for ten years, and the teacher hated me and said I was a bad girl.
r CLASS2* YEAR1B* TEACHER2 WE2 TO-ARGUE1B TEACHER2* TO-HATE1*
l
m zehn jahre leh{rer} streit streit streit lehrer hassen
1427810 koe04 | 18-30m
I’ll pick up the bus and get you there.
r I1 BUS1A* WE2 TO-GET2* TO-PICK-UP1
l TO-PICK-UP1
m bus abholen
1584617 lei12 | 61+f
True. I think our school days were strict.
r I1 TO-SAY1 PAST-OR-BACK-THEN1 WE2 TIME5A* SCHOOL2E TIME5A*
l
m ich sage früher schulzeit
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
Sometimes it happened that teachers used funny signs and we had to laugh about it.
r $GEST-OFF1^ TO-SIGN1A* FUNNY1* WE2 BIT2A* TO-LAUGH1
l
m … gebärden lustig wir muss lachen
1184164 nue01 | 61+m
Not that big of an age difference between us.
r WE2* DIFFERENCE2* WE2
l
m nicht viel unterschied
1290359-… mst05 | 61+f
How will we feel about it?
r WE2 FEELING3 WE2*
l
m
1204694 mue01 | 61+f
The two of us will see what happens later.
r LATER10* $INDEX2 I1 WE2 EYE1* LATER10 ALL2A^
l
m später wir schauen später
1290359-… mst05 | 61+f
We don't know what the future will be like.
r FUTURE1A TO-KNOW-STH2A I1 WE2 TO-KNOW-STH2B* I2* NOT1
l
m zukunft zukunft weiß ich weiß nicht mehr
1177292 hh03 | 46-60m
We didn’t know that in the past they ‘signed’ [gebärden] at the schools for the deaf. We knew it as ‘to chat’ [plaudern].
r DEAF1A SCHOOL1A* TO-SIGN1A* WE2 TO-KNOW-STH-OR-SB1B* QUOTATION-MARKS1^* TO-CHAT1A*
l
m gehörlosenschule gebärden plaudern
1177918 sh05 | 61+m
The both of us need a spyglass to bridge the wide distance to the playing field, just like all the others inside the stadium.
r I1 WE2 MUST1 TO-WATCH1^ FAR-FAR-AWAY1
l
m wir muss fernglas
1427725 koe03 | 18-30m
We weren't aware of it ourselves back then.
r I1 BACK-THEN1 I1 WE2 ALSO3A CLUELESS1A*
l
m bewusst damals wir auch
1429124-… koe10 | 18-30m
Do you remember the time our teams competed against each other?
r LAST3 YOU1* $GEST-TO-PONDER1^* WE2
l
m gegen
1183203 stu15 | 61+f
Looking back, there were things I missed during my time at the school for the deaf.
r $GEST-OFF1^ WHAT1B DEAF1A* WE2 PAST-OR-BACK-THEN1 DEAF1A SCHOOL1A
l
m was wir früher gehörlosenschule
2935384-… mue10 | 61+m
We stayed friends.
r HENCE1* TO-STAY3 FRIEND1A WE2 $GEST-OFF1^
l
m [MG] bleiben freund [MG]
1290359-… mst05 | 61+f
For instance, if children get together and get up to mischief.
r FOOLISH1 I1 UNION2A^ WE2 UNION2A^
l
m dummheit [MG]
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
One cannot see that we are deaf. We look just like hearing people.
r WE2 DEAF1A TO-SEE1 TO-VIEW3*
l
m aber wir [MG] nicht sehen [MG]
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
We don't have anything to relax.
r WE2 NONE1* RELAXATION2 MY1
l
m wir haben keine entspannungstherapie
1246100 fra11 | 18-30m
It’s something we know about some people and it’s the same for us two.
r $GEST^ I1 TO-KNOW-STH-OR-SB1A* WE2 ALSO3A* $INDEX1 TO-KNOW-STH-OR-SB1A*
l
m wir auch
1427810 koe04 | 18-30m
Val Thornes is high up.
r TO1* WE2 $ALPHA1:V-T WE2* FAR1*
l
m hin wir val thorens [MG]
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
We are lucky to have a special “Schwerbehindertenschutz” [severely disabled protection] at work.
r ALSO1A WE2 $ORAL^ BODY1^ $GEST-OFF1^
l
m auch wir können froh sein
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
We are lucky to have a special “Schwerbehindertenschutz” [severely disabled protection] at work.
r BODY1^ $GEST-OFF1^ TO-WORK1 WE2 PARTICULARLY1A* PROTECTION1A SEVERELY-DISABLED1*
l
m froh sein arbeit auch besonderen schutz schwerbehindertenschutz
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
We are able to do this over the distance.
r WE2 FAR-FAR-AWAY1 CAN2A TO-SIGN1G*
l
m [MG] kann
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
The manager was eager to know what we were talking about.
r TO-WANT4* ABSOLUTELY1* TO-KNOW-STH2A WE2 TALK2A $GEST-OFF1^
l
m wollte unbedingt wissen was wir unterhalten haben
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
I simply told him that it was our little secret.
r TO-BELONG1^* WE2 SECRET2C $GEST-NO-PROBLEM1^*
l
m nur unser geheimnis
1204691 mue01 | 61+f
(Most of them are from the east. I know a lot of them; we hug and they guide us.)
r I1 TO-KNOW-STH-OR-SB1A TO-HUG2* WE2 LINK2*
l $INDEX2
m ich kenne ken{ne} [MG] [MG] gut{e} ve{rbindung}
1429124-… koe10 | 18-30m
So, if we compete during the North-Rhine-Westphalian championships, any suspension after a red card will be valid, but not for friendly matches, or/
r MEANING1 WE2 AGAINST3C RIGHT-OR-CORRECT1A* AREA1A^
l
m bedeutet [MG] [MG] nordrhein-westfalen meisterschaft
1244796 fra02 | 31-45m
Just imagine that in the place we are born and raised, our parents and everyone in our social environment were deaf.
r I1 IMAGINATION1A* WE2 HEARING1A* AREA1A
l $GEST-TO-PONDER1^
m vorstellen hö{rend}
1244796 fra02 | 31-45m
Just imagine that in the place we are born and raised, our parents and everyone in our social environment were deaf.
r AREA1A I1 BIRTH1B* WE2 BIRTH1B* YOUR1 PARENTS1A
l
m [MG] eltern
1427158-… koe01 | 18-30f
My boyfriend and I planned a five-week journey through Australia.
r LIFE-PARTNER-SWEETHEART1 TO-WISH1B* TO-PLAN-AND-GO-THROUGH-WITH-STH1 WE2 PAST1^* AUSTRALIA-AUSLAN1* WEEK1A*
l
m wünsch pla{nen} wir australien fünf wochen
1245820 fra09 | 31-45m
Too bad that we don't have a good regional association for the Saarland. Bummer.
r BUT1* UNFORTUNATELY1A* TO-BELONG1* WE2 HERE1* SAARLAND2A $ALPHA1:L
l
m aber leider saarland landesverband
1204694 mue01 | 61+f
Alright, I think we had a good talk.
r CLEAR1D EVERYTHING1A CLEAR1D WE2 I2 TALK2C*
l GOOD1
m klar alles klar wir haben gut unterhalt
1584617 lei12 | 61+f
But still we/
r $INDEX1 NEVERTHELESS3 WE2
l
m aber trotzdem
1210206-… mue05 | 61+f
And that distance, from Passau to Marktl.
r $INDEX-TO-SCREEN1* AND2A* $INDEX-TO-SCREEN1 WE2* FROM-OR-BY-OR-OF2* FROM-OR-BY-OR-OF2 PASSAU1
l
m von passau
1429781-… koe13 | 61+m
We get along well.
r WE2* GOOD1 TO-GET-ALONG1A*
l
m [MG] gut verstehen
1429781-… koe13 | 61+m
There were never really arguments between us.
r TO-ARGUE1B* WE2* NOTHING1A
l
m streit [MG]
1184756 nue04 | 31-45m
We went out together.
r WE2* TOGETHER1A* $INDEX1*
l
m zusammen
1220196-… hb05 | 61+f
I was constantly fighting with my parents.
r MY1 PARENTS9A* WE2* TO-ARGUE1A* THROUGH1A TO-ARGUE1A
l
m meine eltern [MG] durch [MG]
1183917 hh05 | 31-45m
I had a feeling that Phuket wouldn’t be a great fit for my girlfriend and me.
r $NAME FEELING3 TO-MATCH3* WE2*
l
m phuket passt
1245356 fra04 | 61+m
There were two on the one side, and we were four people, but one of us went there, and that left groups of three.
r $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:2* WE2* $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:3d* $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:4* TO-TAKE1A^*
l $NUM-ONE-TO-TEN1A:4*
m zwei dr{ei} vier
1428225 koe06 | 46-60f
Only at school I found a friend who visited me.
r $INDEX1* TO-MARRY1A^* HE-SHE-IT2* WE2*
l TO-VISIT-OR-TO-ATTEND1B*
m … freundin [MG] [MG]
1418903 ber08 | 31-45f
May I say something?
r TO-LINK1A^ ALLOWED1 WE2*
l
m [MG] darf
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
There wasn't anyone else, it was just us two.
r ALL2A^ $GEST^ ONLY2A* WE2* TO-OWN-TO-EXIST1 PRESENT-OR-HERE1
l
m niemand nur wir haben da
1583214 lei05 | 61+f
You can get married too young there.
r
l YOUNG2B $INDEX1* TO-MARRY6 WE2* $GEST-OFF1^*
m jung heiraten
1249131-… goe09 | 61+f
Often, when everybody was playing outside in the schoolyard, a girl from my class would take the notebooks from the bags.
r MY1 CLASS1* $INDEX1 WE2* SELF1A* $PROD COPY1A^*
l
m meine klasse beide selbst
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
He can speak, but we only use sign language.
r CAN1 TO-SPEAK6 WE2* TO-MAKE-USE-OF-STH2* ONLY4 TO-SIGN1D
l
m kann aber nur gebärdensprache
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
It's easier for us.
r EASY3* WE2*
l
m mehr einfach für uns
1184749 nue04 | 31-45m
He can sign a little, and I can talk to him in case of problems.
r I1* TO-SIGN1A* CAN1 WE2* TO-MEET2B* PROBLEM2B I1*
l
m kann problem
1220196-… hb05 | 46-60m
We divorced after three years of marriage.
r WE2* YEAR1B* I1* WE2*
l
m drei jahr
1220196-… hb05 | 46-60m
We divorced after three years of marriage.
r WE2* YEAR1B* I1* WE2* TO-MARRY3B LATER4 I1
l
m drei jahr [MG]
1419265 ber09 | 18-30f
They’d talk about the children, work, exchange thoughts.
r I2* HUSBAND1 WIFE1 WE2* I1 THATS-ALL1A TO-DISCUSS1*
l
m mann frau
1220196-… hb05 | 46-60m
I'm with my girlfriend #Name1 for 11 years now.
r ALREADY1A* $NUM-TEEN2B:1d YEAR4B* WE2* TOGETHER-PERSON1*
l
m schon elf jahr zusamm
1220196-… hb05 | 46-60m
We are together for 11 years now and I want to get married, but when? We/
r I1 TO-MARRY3B WHEN4 WE2*
l
m … heiraten wann
1184089 nue01 | 61+m
The common people are left clueless.
r $GEST^ WE2* SMALL9 DONT-KNOW1^
l
m [MG] kleine leute weiß nicht
1430396 koe16 | 46-60m
And in the evenings we chatted downstairs; we watched movies, or we chatted.
r DOWN1* EVENING2* TALK2A* WE2* GROUP1C LOCATION1A^* TO-LOOK1*
l
m unt{en} ab{end} unter{halten} wir [MG]
1184164 nue01 | 61+m
Not that big of an age difference between us.
r WE2* DIFFERENCE2* WE2
l
m nicht viel unterschied
1431224 koe19 | 31-45m
But we had a nine hour layover in Los Angeles and thought about what we could do.
r HOUR2B* TO-WORK4^* WE2*
l
m neun stunden was machen
1430592 koe17 | 61+f
That wasn’t the same for the two of us.
r WE2* SAME3 NO1A
l
m {das}selbe
1290359-… mst05 | 61+f
How will we feel about it?
r WE2 FEELING3 WE2*
l
m
1418903 ber08 | 31-45f
Back then we were closer, but that faded over time because of different interests.
r LATER7 CONTACT2B
l WE2* TOGETHER3A* $GEST-TO-PONDER1^
m wir kontakt
1204877 mue03 | 46-60m
On the other hand I can sign with deaf people, so I have the opportunity to use both forms of communication.
r HENCE1* DEAF1A WE2* MORE1* TO-SIGN1D* I2*
l
m deshalb gehörlos mehr
1178133 sh06 | 46-60f
We’re both women, we don’t like soccer that much, that’s normal.
r WE2* WOMAN1A NOT3A TO-LOVE-STH1
l
m frau nicht
1431896 sh08 | 46-60m
We used to be, um/
r PAST-OR-BACK-THEN1 BEEN2A* WE2* $GEST-TO-PONDER1^
l
m früher gewesen [MG]
2935384-… mue10 | 61+m
We once worked as a team.
r I1 EXAMPLE1^* WE2* TOGETHER-PERSON1^ TO-WORK1*
l
m damit wir zusammen gearbeitet
1180097 hb07 | 18-30m
He was happy to make one out for me. I got one made out of a special thin paper, which was stamped.
r FEELING3^ SMOOTH-OR-SLICK1 SPECIAL1* WE2* GOOD1 STAMP1* DONE1A
l
m glatt speziell [MG] fertig
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
My parents are hearing, so we speak with each other.
r HEARING1A* I1 PARENTS1B WE2* TO-SPEAK6
l
m hörend ich meine eltern [MG]
1246102 fra11 | 18-30f
It changed when I saw that a friend of mine, my dad, and a few other deaf people started to use signs more confidently.
r I1* MAIN1A^* FRIEND7* WE2* AND3* OR5 FATHER1*
l
m beste freundin und vater
1428038 koe05 | 46-60f
Yes, we just aren't capable of filtering oxygen from water.
r OXYGEN1 WE2* $GEST-DECLINE1^* WE2* CAN2B
l
m sauerstoff w{ir} wir können
1428038 koe05 | 46-60f
Yes, we just aren't capable of filtering oxygen from water.
r OXYGEN1 WE2* $GEST-DECLINE1^* WE2* CAN2B NONE3 OXYGEN1
l
m sauerstoff w{ir} wir können kein sauerstoff
1183203 stu15 | 61+f
We just weren’t able to understand them. Had they been signing with us, explaining things wouldn’t have been a problem.
r WE2* BOTH2A* TO-UNDERSTAND1* PARENTS1A
l
m wir beide versteh el{tern}
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
My parents speak with me.
r MY1 MY1 PARENTS1A* WE2* MORE1 TO-SPEAK5A*
l
m meine eltern mehr [MG]
1250646 mvp05 | 61+f
We couldn’t anticipate that the wall would fall.
r FALL-OF-THE-BERLIN-WALL1 NOT1
l WE2* TO-LOOK-WHO-IS-TALKING1^
m mauerfall wir riechen nicht
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
We sometimes use our private signs and then are looked at weirdly.
r DIFFERENCE4^ WE2* $ORAL^ BOTH1* PRIVATE1A*
l
m manchmal wie unter{halten} privat
1289793 mst02 | 18-30f
Us two, we should know this.
r
l MUST1 TO-KNOW-STH-OR-SB1A* WE2*
m muss kennen
1200691 stu02 | 18-30f
We then say it's a siblings' sign language.
r I2* LIKE-THIS1B* WE2* SIBLINGS1 TALK3* TO-SIGN1A*
l
m so geschwister gebärdensprache
1291638 mst11 | 61+m
We could talk well and he gave interesting history lessons.
r WE2* PERFECT3* TALK2C INTEREST1B
l
m wir perfekt [MG] interessant
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
It doesn't affect us, we can simply do our work even if there would be constant chatter in the background.
r WE2* CLUELESS1A^ HAPPY1 TO-FOCUS1
l
m [MG] [MG]
1182801 stu16 | 31-45f
Neither of us knows that.
r WE2* TO-KNOW-STH2B NOT3A
l
m weiß nicht
1429124-… koe10 | 18-30m
So, if we place third at the North Rhine-Westphalian championship, we won’t be able to play in the German championship next season.
r I2* AREA1A^* CHAMPIONSHIP1* WE2* TO-LIST1C* $NUM-ORDINAL1:3d* AFTER-TIME2A*
l
m nord{rhein-west}falen meisterschaft zweite dritte nächste
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
We visited some deaf people in Groningen.
r WE2* $INDEX1* HEADING1^* $INDEX1
l
m groning{en}
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
We have that.
r WE2* POSSIBLE1* $GEST-OFF1^
l
m möglichkeit
1206010 mue12 | 46-60f
Unlike the hearing people who toss and turn in their bed and can't find some peace, we sleep soundly.
r $INDEX1* TO-TOSS-AND-TURN1A WE2* MORE1* SILENCE1 $GEST-OFF1^
l
m [MG] mehr ruhe
1427810 koe04 | 18-30m
Val Thornes is high up.
r TO1* WE2 $ALPHA1:V-T WE2* FAR1*
l
m hin wir val thorens [MG]
1427810 koe04 | 18-30m
We’re a bit further down, though.
r NOW1 WE2* BIT2A* LOW1A* BECAUSE-OF2B*
l
m jetzt
1289462 mst01 | 46-60f
Of course. I want everyone to be able to live in safety.
r I2* SECURE1* ALL3* WE2* TO-LIVE4
l
m [MG] sicher alle leben
1211752 stu06 | 18-30f
Then they can be sure it’s a fit for them. They haven’t done it before after all.
r $GEST-TO-PONDER2^ FIGURE2A^* CAN2A WE2* MORE1* SECURE1 NOTHING-ELSE1
l
m [MG] noch mal kann mehr sicher
1220196-… hb05 | 61+f
I could communicate well with my mother.
r BUT1* WE2* MOTHER1* GOOD1* COMMUNICATION1A*
l
m aber beide mutter gut kommunikation
1220196-… hb05 | 61+f
I get what my mother is saying, but it's terribly exhausting.
r $INDEX1* $INDEX1* WE2* GOOD1* $INDEX1* TROUBLE1
l
m aber aber [MG]
1212611 fra08 | 18-30f
But that was particularly interesting for me, because my parents expected me to speak to deaf people with CIs, so that they would be able to know what was happening.
r MY1* PARENTS1B EXPECTATION1A WE2* SHOULD1* TO-SPEAK6* IN-ORDER-THAT2*
l
m meine eltern erwarten soll damit
1212611 fra08 | 18-30f
I didn’t agree with that, and when my parents were there, I would barely talk to my friends; we were holding back.
r MOST1A* PUBLIC1A* LITTLE-BIT9* WE2* LITTLE-BIT9* LIKE3B $PROD
l
m meiste{ns} offen wir wenig wie [MG]
1419265 ber09 | 18-30f
“The two of us stay married, completely normal.
r LIKE3B TO-MARRY3A TO-STAY3
l I1 WE2*
m wie bleib
1583950 lei09 | 31-45f
In our club, we really stuck together, and it was really noteworthy that we always had very nice conversations.
r TO-SPEAK2^* ALL2C^* GOOD1* WE2*
l
m quatsch quatsch
1583214 lei05 | 61+f
And at some point the cat preferred to stay at my and my husband's place rather than at my mother's.
r I1* HUSBAND1 $INDEX1* WE2* REGULAR2A*
l
m [MG] mann stamm
1220196-… hb05 | 46-60m
I was asked if the two of us wanted to found a motorcycle club.
r $GEST^ WE2* ACTIVE3B^* I1 MOTORCYCLE1B*
l
m du ich [MG] motoclub
1414503 ber05 | 61+f
I would usually go with my husband.
r WITH1A* MAN1* WITH1A* WE2* WITH1A*
l
m mit mit mann mit
1210825 mue13 | 46-60m
I told my girlfriend that I wasn’t even prepared to be sent away all of a sudden.
r TO-LET-KNOW1A* NOT3A* PLAN2* WE2* I1* NEXT1 TO-SEND-OR-TO-DISPATCH1
l
m nicht plan nächste schick
1177002 hh02 | 31-45f
We are colleagues, but/
r $GEST-NM-SHAKE-HEAD1^ I1 COLLEAGUE1A* WE2* $GEST-I-DONT-KNOW1^* IF-OR-WHEN1A* $INDEX2
l
m [MG] kolleg aber w{enn}
1430592 koe17 | 61+f
We spoke to one another and I could lip read well.
r WE2* TO-SPEAK1A $INDEX1 WE2*
l
m [MG]
1430592 koe17 | 61+f
We spoke to one another and I could lip read well.
r WE2* TO-SPEAK1A $INDEX1 WE2* MOUTH1A I1
l
m [MG] mund ablesen
1430592 koe17 | 61+f
My husband also talked to them, but us parents only signed to one another.
r BUT1* I1 MAN11 WE2* TO-SIGN1G $GEST-OFF1^ $GEST-OFF1^
l
m aber mann [MG]
1245390 fra04 | 61+m
There we learned that there are two groups.
r $INDEX1 HAVE-AUXILIARY1 WE2* TO-LEARN-STH1A* TO-TAKE1A^ $INDEX1
l
m dort haben wir erfahren
1584198 lei10 | 31-45m
It does not matter what anybody’s work is, I would like to have interpreters.
r WHATEVER3* WHAT1B WE2* EQUAL1A* I1 INTERPRETER1*
l
m egal was [MG] dolme{tscher}
1414503 ber05 | 61+f
He was surprised that I actually wanted my records. Then we went to another doctor.
r TO-LOOK-AT1* I1 WITH1A* WE2* DIFFERENT1 SOMEWHERE-ELSE2* PHYSICIAN1*
l
m mann zusammen woanders arzt
1430592 koe17 | 61+f
Because both of us are deaf we could sign to each other from the beginning.
r WE2* I1 BOTH2A* DEAF1A
l
m gehörlos
1430592 koe17 | 61+f
Because both of us are deaf we could sign to each other from the beginning.
r I1 TO-WONDER1* $GEST-OFF1^ WE2* TO-SIGN1G
l
m
1289462 mst01 | 46-60f
We need too much energy; we’d have to give up a lot.
r WE2* TO-NEED1 MUCH1C STRONG1A*
l
m wir brauch viel stark
1291572 mst10 | 46-60f
Deaf people like us need an explanation of the Bible texts.
r WE2* DEAF1A BIBLE2* TO-NEED1*
l
m für bibel braucht
1248090 goe04 | 31-45m
Both of us, yes.
r BOTH2A* THROUGH1A* WE2* BOTH2A*
l
m [MG] [MG]
1248400 goe05 | 46-60m
We can drive there and they implant the dental crown and we drive back home, it's just like in Germany.
r WE2* TO-COME1* DENTIST1* ALREADY1A*
l
m wir kommen [MG] schon
1413703 ber02 | 46-60m
We are done!
r DONE4* DONE4* WE2* DONE1B DONE4* GOOD1*
l
m
1584198 lei10 | 31-45m
I met her online, through WKW, “Wer kennt wen” [lit. who knows whom, now inactive German social networking site comparable to Myspace], you know?
r $INDEX1 $ALPHA1:W-K-W WHO-KNOWS-WHO1 WE2*
l
m w-k-w wer kennt wen
1183203 stu15 | 61+f
I also ask myself what we would have done if we had had deaf children ourselves?
r BUT1* QUESTION1 IF-OR-WHEN1A* WE2* BIRTH1A $INDEX1* DEAF1A*
l
m aber frag mich wenn wir beide
1209077 mue06 | 18-30f
Right, people who are studying today, are our age.
r LIKE3B* WE2* OLD3 EQUAL9^
l PEOPLE2 OLD3*
m leute so wie wir alter
1204691 mue01 | 61+f
We were both dressmakers.
r WE2* PAST-OR-BACK-THEN1* TAILOR1
l
m wir früh schneid
1204691 mue01 | 61+f
Now, we’re both happy with our pension.
r NOW2* WE2* SATISFIED2A* PENSION1* PENSION4
l
m jetzt sind wir zufrie{den} mit rente
1182062 stu12 | 46-60f
I've seen it happening; it’s so sad.
r BEEN1 I1* INTO2* WE2* I1 TO-CRY1B*
l
m gewesen [MG]
1432043 sh08 | 46-60m
Us two?
r WE2*
l
m