Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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isʲoɒ̯ morx wɘːtəx mans | pelym mansi (PM) | Jeblankov, Feodor Ljepifanovich | prose (pro) | Bear Songs (bes) | 1335 | glossed | – |
Text Source | Editor | Collector |
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Kannisto, Artturi - Liimola, Matti (1958): Wogulische Volksdichtung gesammelt und übersetzt von Artturi Kannisto, bearbeitet und herausgegeben von Matti Liimola. IV. Band. Bärenlieder. In: Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne, 114. Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, 348-349. | Liimola, Matti | Kannisto & Liimola (KL) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"A girl went to gather cloudberries" | – | – | – |
by Riese, Timothy |
Citation |
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Kannisto & Liimola 1958: OUDB Pelym Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1335. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1335 (Accessed on 2024-11-23) |
isʲoɒ̯ morx wɘːtəx mans (glossed version) |
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A girl went to gather cloudberries. |
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And she lost her way. |
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She wandered for a short time or she wandered for a long time. |
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While she was going about, she came upon a bear den. |
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Then she went in. |
6 |
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The bear looked at her. |
7 |
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The bear pushed her farther back with his snout. |
8 |
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The bear searches in its pillow, it dug out a root. |
9 |
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He puts it into her mouth. |
10 |
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She ate it up. |
11 |
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She was completely overcome by sleep. |
12 |
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She lay down. |
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She fell asleep. |
14 |
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Whether it was a long winter or whether it was a short winter, she slept all through it. |
15 |
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Suddenly she is woken up, with a bear snout she gets pushed up. |
16 |
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And she got up. |
17 |
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When she looks, it had somehow become summer. |
18 |
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The bear says, marry me! |
19 |
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Where (else) should I go, she says, I'll marry (you). |
20 |
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And she got married. |
21 |
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Then they live on. |
22 |
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They lived a short or a long time, a girl and a boy were born. |
23 |
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They came into a cone-forest. |
24 |
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The bear climbed up to knock down cones. |
25 |
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And he knocks down cones. |
26 |
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They gather cones. |
27 |
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The boy put down a cone longer than a quarter cubit. |
28 |
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The girl stole it. |
29 |
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The boy began to look for it all at once, the girl says, I didn't take it. |
30 |
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Then the boy says, swear! |
31 |
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The girl swore; by the bottom of our uncle's quiver I didn't take it. |
32 |
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The bear calls down, are you crazy? |
33 |
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Now we're ruined by perjury, you've killed me. |
34 |
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When she gets shoved aside, there lies the cone longer than a quarter cubit. |
35 |
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Then he says, where shall we go? |
36 |
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Let's go to your uncle's big hunting path. |
37 |
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There we'll lie down a bit. |
38 |
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They lay down a bit next to the hunting path. |
39 |
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Then they lie. |
40 |
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Suddenly they get barked at by a dog. |
41 |
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Up above a man calls, Uncle, for taking the song further, for taking the tale further, take a look out. |
42 |
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When I looked out, I lost consciousness. |
43 |
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The woman calls, you have killed your brother-in-law, eat him up. |