Forum for English and all other languages .
Moderators: kokoyaya , Beaumont
foryoureyesonly
Membre / Member
Posts: 1003 Joined: 09 Aug 2003 21:19
Location: New Delhi. Tamil(LM)+français+anglais+hindi
Post
by foryoureyesonly » 01 Oct 2003 16:19
Dear Freelangers, how do you say 'teddy bear' in your language?
Thank you in advance for your kind replies.
L'héroïsme au quotidien n'est pas dans une attitude défensive mais dans le positionnement tranquille.
- Jacques Salomé
helena
Membre / Member
Posts: 1271 Joined: 14 Apr 2003 22:29
Location: Valence
Post
by helena » 01 Oct 2003 16:26
croatian: (plišani) medo; (plišani) medvjedić (from medvjed = bear)
Last edited by
helena on 01 Oct 2003 20:21, edited 1 time in total.
Helena
didine
Freelang co-moderator
Posts: 9989 Joined: 15 Sep 2002 15:33
Location: Bruxelles
Post
by didine » 01 Oct 2003 16:40
Finnish: nallekarhu
Estonian: kaisukarhu
Swedish: nallebjörn
Polish: miś
Russian: мишка
Pontus
Membre / Member
Posts: 67 Joined: 17 Dec 2002 16:25
Location: Suéde - Halmstad
Contact:
Post
by Pontus » 01 Oct 2003 18:37
didine wrote: Swedish: nallebjörn
Or 'teddybjörn'
43% of all statistics are useless.
Soleil
Membre / Member
Posts: 249 Joined: 18 Jun 2003 17:28
Location: Paris, France
Post
by Soleil » 01 Oct 2003 18:40
French : "ours" (which is also the word for a live "bear" or, if you want to be more specific, "ours en peluche")
Latinus
Admin
Posts: 24965 Joined: 18 Mar 2002 01:00
Location: complètement à l'Ouest
Contact:
Post
by Latinus » 01 Oct 2003 18:50
Soleil wrote: French : "ours" (which is also the word for a live "bear" or, if you want to be more specific, "ours en peluche")
don't we say "peluche" and "doudou" too ?
Les courses hippiques, lorsqu'elles s'y frottent.
kokoyaya
Admin
Posts: 31645 Joined: 10 Oct 2002 14:12
Location: Moissac (82)
Contact:
Post
by kokoyaya » 01 Oct 2003 18:57
Latinus wrote: don't we say "peluche" and "doudou" too ?
We do, but it's not necessarily a Teddy bear.
kokoyaya
Admin
Posts: 31645 Joined: 10 Oct 2002 14:12
Location: Moissac (82)
Contact:
Post
by kokoyaya » 01 Oct 2003 18:58
Spanish: osito (de peluche)
Olivier
Membre / Member
Posts: 3176 Joined: 14 Jun 2002 02:00
Location: Toulouse
Post
by Olivier » 01 Oct 2003 19:10
Hungarian: maci
-- Olivier
Se nem kicsi, se nem nagy: Ni trop petit(e), ni trop grand(e):
Éppen hozzám való vagy! Tu es juste fait(e) pour moi!
j u d i t h
Membre / Member
Posts: 154 Joined: 21 Apr 2003 09:17
Location: Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Post
by j u d i t h » 01 Oct 2003 19:56
Hi!
In German it's Teddybär or just Teddy .
Judith
j u d i t h
Membre / Member
Posts: 154 Joined: 21 Apr 2003 09:17
Location: Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Post
by j u d i t h » 01 Oct 2003 19:58
Hi again
In
Danish it's
teddybjørn or
bamse .
Judith
Bernadette
Membre / Member
Posts: 1867 Joined: 10 May 2003 12:01
Location: FRANCE
Post
by Bernadette » 01 Oct 2003 20:24
In italian, I think : orsacchiotto, but I am not sure.
'Quelle heure est-il, bien à peu près'
Nephilim
Membre / Member
Posts: 1556 Joined: 25 Sep 2003 04:33
Location: où tu veux quand tu veux, baby..!
Post
by Nephilim » 01 Oct 2003 22:07
czech = méda [médya] (medved = bear)
slovak = macko [matsko] (medved = bear)
(sorry, my #é~?*?¤ keyboard doesn't have slavic accents - the "diacritics")
You may feel alone when you’re falling asleep
And every time tears roll down your cheeks
But I know your heart belongs to someone you’ve yet to meet
Someday you will be loved
Demona
Membre / Member
Posts: 124 Joined: 17 Dec 2002 16:26
Contact:
Post
by Demona » 02 Oct 2003 17:57
hello,
didine wrote: Estonian: kaisukarhu
correction: i belive it is
karu , and the translations is not really accurate....i`d suggest: mesikäpp, karuott, karumõmm, mõmmik, mängukaru...all of these are colloquial.
didine wrote: Russian: мишка
correction: the translation is inaccurate, the more suitable variant would be
плюшевый медвежонок ,
игрушечный мишка .
cheers
SubEspion
Membre / Member
Posts: 3705 Joined: 02 May 2003 22:53
Location: Si vous saviez !
Post
by SubEspion » 02 Oct 2003 22:51
In CANADIAN FRENCH
· Nounours
All letters are pronounced...