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⁌ ULY ⁍asked for translation 8 лет назад
How to translate? (ru-en)

Книг у меня ещё много, так что запасайтесь успокоительным.

User translations (5)

  1. 1.

    I still have a bunch of books, so stock up on nerve pills.

    translation added by ⁌ ULY ⁍
    Gold ru-en
    3
  2. 2.

    I've got a lot more books, so buy sedatives in advance.

    Translator's comment

    запасаться - to stock

    translation added by Igor Yurchenko
    Gold ru-en
    2
  3. 3.

    I still have a lot of books, so provide yourself with a sedative.

    translation added by Олег VV
    Silver ru-en
    1
  4. 4.

    i still have a lot of books, so get yourself a sedative

    translation added by Artem Karayanov
    1
  5. 5.

    I still have plenty of books, so you better provide yourself with some sedatives.

    translation added by Jane Lesh
    Gold ru-en
    1

Discussion (35)

Tatiana Gerasimenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Yet I have a lot of books to read, that's why you should provide yourself/yourselves with a sedative/tranquilizer.

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Tatiana и Jane, я что-то не уверен, что существует такая вещь как "provide yourself with"

Tatiana Gerasimenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Ой как много, оказывается, переводов!

Tatiana Gerasimenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Не знаю как где, а в словарях точно есть, Игорь.)

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

все резко бросились на помощь Uly. вот что значит репутация!

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

ну со словарями я спорить не буду. но мне эта конструкция кажется неестественной. значит я её не встречал, ну или встречал недостаточно часто. сейчас благодарный Uly нас рассудит =)

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Let me hazard a guess, Uly. It's Анастасия Кудрина again, isn't it?

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Let me hazard a guess, Uly. It's Анастасия Кудрина again, isn't it?

Holy Molyadded a comment 8 лет назад

Игорь, совершенно естественная конструкция.

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

OK, Ольга. спасибо. буду иметь в виду.

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

Igor прав... ну и Ольга права) "provide yourself with" грамматически корректно, но немного неестественно в этой ситуации. Здесь лучше сказать "stock up on."

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

Aleh, if I was sedated, you would all be fucked because there's nobody else to check your mistakes.

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

Igor has the No. 1 translation. Good job!

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

Aleh, PLENTY means ENOUGH, but it's a "reassuring" enough that we use when there's a stated concern that something may run out or not be enough. So in essence, your translation means "Don't worry - I'm not going to run out of books anytime soon" which is not quite the meaning here. Furthermore, it doesn't effectivly lead into the second part of the sentence because it leaves the listener to ponder "Why should I take a nerve pill when YOU'RE the one who's worried about running out of books?"

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

I think both SEDATIVES and TRANQUILIZERS are too extreme for this situation. Sedatives are for hysterical people, and tranquilizers are meant to knock people unconscious. If I had to pick one of the two, I'd go with SEDATIVE, but I prefer just NERVE PILL. (Obviously, I've never met the Russian word before, so I may be wrong. I'm just going by what I'd say.)

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

Aleh, I just noticed "so that you should..." That does work here. In fact, I can't think of any context where it would work.

Aleh Laadded a comment 8 лет назад

Thank you!

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

Igor, this wasn't that Anastasia creature - hopefully we've heard the last of her! It's a sweet lady on here named Olga (not our Olga - another one).

Aleh Laadded a comment 8 лет назад

For those, who don't know what it was all about, even Russian sentence doesn't make sense. Why should one stock up on nerve pills, if somene else still has a lot of books?

Tatiana Gerasimenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

As far as I remember, she meant she was going to give things rough for those who would dare to deal with her requests (or even give them hell).

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Вот а такие моменты я действительно жалею, что я совершенно не злорадный человек...
thank you, Uly!

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Uly, in Russian we have a word транквилизаторы, but usually the word успокоительное is used for the whole range of drugs that calm people down, now matter how strong. moreover, when someone tells you to take успокоительное, they usually imply that you're hysterical. but it depends on the situation, of course.

Tatiana Gerasimenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

I don't think the girl implied that the translators are hysterical on here. Rather, she was going to present them some very challenging extracts.

Tatiana Gerasimenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Thank you all, especially Uly, for one more lesson!

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

Exactly, it was a warning that she was going to post a lot more sentences and questions. The ones she had posted already had some problems, so she was preparing us for more stress.

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

OK then. but in that case the phrase itself seems a bit strange to me.

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

Why is that?

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

I don't know. I mean she is going to challenge you. to give you some hard tasks. but she needs the result of your work. she wants you to meet the challenge. so why sedatives? or nerve pills, or whatever. she doesn't need you sedated, she needs you sharp as a needle. as I've already said, in Russian you usually tell someone to take sedatives, if they are hysterical, or too anxious, or something. that's why I thought that was Anastasia - I looked like her way of mocking people. as in "I've got a lot more books to prayer you with, so you'll inevitably become hysterical (or outraged), so stock up on sedatives, you're gonna need'em". at least that's how I understood the sentence out of context.
I wouldn't use the phrase in the circumstances.

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

I think you're overthinking it :) She's going to have a lot more challenging questions, so Steady your nerves! ...or simply Be prepared... or even Consider yourselves warned.

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

maybe I am, Uly. but the fact is "be prepared, or consider yourself warned" are exactly the words I would've used in the circumstances. not "stock up on the nerve pills". that's just my opinion, of course.

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

You mean in Russian or in English?

Igor Yurchenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

in Russian, Uly. but, being Russian, I'd use the same phrases in English too =)

⁌ ULY ⁍added a comment 8 лет назад

In English it's perfectly fitting and humorous.

Tatiana Gerasimenkoadded a comment 8 лет назад

Игорь, расслабься! Это называется "женская" логика!

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