yanagi
How to say "民以食为天,食以农为本,农以地为根" in English? The sentence "民以食为天,食以农为本,农以地为根" literally means that human beings depends on food and food stems from agriculture while agriculture is closely linked to soil. Since human beings, food, agriculture and soil are closely related in the sentence, I wonder if there is a classic or elegent way to put it. Does "humanity’s most fundamental relationship is with food, and food with agriculture while agriculture with soil" sound OK? Thanks.
2016年9月24日 06:33
回答 · 3
It depends on what you are trying to say. Are you trying to say that mankind's survival depends on the soil? 1. From soil comes food; from food comes survival. Therefore, mankind depends on agriculture for his very survival. 2. Man needs soil to produce food, so our lives ultimately depend on agriculture using fertile soil to produce food. 3. Mankind's survival, fertile soil, food, and agriculture are all inextricably intertwined. 4. From soil to food to survival. Agriculture is vital to man's existence. 5. Agriculture uses soil to produce food, which is vital for man's existence.
2016年9月25日
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