Olivier
you get on with English... could you please translate this sentense in french ?
2014年11月21日 00:04
解答 · 4
1
What does "You get on with English" mean?
2014年11月21日
Cette phrase n'est pas clair en anglais. "Get on" peut avoir plusieurs définitions - avez-vous un certain contexte?
2014年11月21日
Olivier, I think "tu te débrouilles bien en anglais" translates to "Your English is reasonably good." Sometimes people translate 'se débrouiller' to "to get by", but "to get by" really means "manage with difficulty to live or accomplish something; you have just enough of something to do so". So "get by" is not a good translation, because the implication is "with difficulty", though you will see that some people would translate your sentence to "You can get by reasonably well in English". In fact, if we are rigorous with the meaning of "get by", "get by" and "fairly well" are contradictions. If you look up the Oxford French Dictionary, its advice is simply to translate your sentence to "You speak good English." "Tu te débrouilles en anglais", without the "bien", would translate to "You can manage in English", or "Your English is good enough." To go back to your question about "You get on with English": it does not mean anything. Regarding "get by", we have discussed it above. I hope that clarifies everything you want to know about the relationship between "se débrouiller" and "get by" and "manage".
2014年11月21日
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