Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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tʲimaŋk jærɨɣ | pelym mansi (PM) | Ljalkin, Andrei Petrovich | poetry/song (poe) | Bear Songs (bes) | 1342 | 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, 292-302. | Liimola, Matti; Kuzjomkin, Andrei Aleksejevich | Kannisto & Liimola (KL) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"Song of Tʲim's Mother" | – | – | – |
by Riese, Timothy |
Citation |
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Kannisto & Liimola 1958: OUDB Pelym Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1342. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1342 (Accessed on 2024-11-14) |
tʲimaŋk jærɨɣ (glossed version) |
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1 |
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Song of Tʲim's Mother. |
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[bird-cherry growing bird-cherry meadow] |
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How does the bird-cherry growing bird-cherry meadow grow for Tʲim's mother? |
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[berry growing berry forest] |
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How does the berry growing berry forest grow for Tʲim's mother? |
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When the bird cherries ripen |
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With my two paws (like) dry grass |
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I move myself down to the riverbank, |
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When the berries ripen |
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with my two paws (like) dry grass |
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I move myself down to the riverbank. |
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What does Tʲim's mother look like? |
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How do the bird cherries ripen for her, |
14 |
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How do the berries ripen for her? |
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With a game-biting, doom-bringing heart |
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with an elk-biting, doom-bringing heart |
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I set myself against her. |
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Suddenly Tʲim's mother can be heard coming. |
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The sound of the oar shaft clacking |
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can be heard over the headland. |
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Suddenly I look, |
22 |
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the prow of her prowed boat has appeared, |
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the stern of her sterned boat has appeared. |
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The prowed boat is being steered, |
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the sterned boat is being steered towards me. |
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When she arrived |
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she supported herself on the tip of the oar. |
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(And) jumped ashore. |
29 |
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With an elk-biting, doom-bringing heart |
30 |
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I leapt at her, |
31 |
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with a game-biting, doom-bringing heart |
32 |
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I leapt at her. |
33 |
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[with a big hip-axe] |
34 |
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When I am struck with a large hip-axe |
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I fell back. |
36 |
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My cheek hair [n.n.] grown this summer |
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were sliced off. |
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My cub born this summer |
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[by her big dog as large as a he-wolf] |
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was killed by her big dog as large as a he-wolf. |
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She grabbed it by the hipbone, |
42 |
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tossed it into the boat, and says: |
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All kinds of shit and piss |
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frighten my heart. |
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In a god-granted good fall |
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my son's hundred bear mark will be reached. |
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The bear says in turn, |
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[for your son] |
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What kind of hundred bears were they for your son, |
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toothless and clawless? |
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My heart was pierced by a larch-wood pole, |
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my heart was pierced by a fir tree pole. |
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I know your son's sable-hunting hunting path, |
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I know your son's squirrel-hunting hunting path. |
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On the day your son goes hunting |
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I will place myself at the edge of your son's sable hunting path |
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I will place myself at the edge of the squirrel hunting path, |
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I will set myself against him with an elk-biting, doom-bringing heart, |
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I will set myself against him with a game-biting, doom-bringing heart. |
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On the day he goes hunting |
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with my two paws (like) dry grass |
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I placed myself at the side of his hunting path. |
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With an elk-biting, doom-bringing heart I set myself against him, |
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with a game-biting, doom-bringing heart I set myself against him. |
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I sat for a short time or for a long time, |
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how should I know? |
67 |
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I repressed my big game-smell. |
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Suddenly I look, |
69 |
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two dogs appear as large as he-wolves. |
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There is no deadfall den they have not smelled, |
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there is no tree-root den they have not smelled. |
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Suddenly a branch crackled, |
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my heart startled at it. |
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Suddenly I look, |
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Tʲim the son has appeared. |
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I took a good look at him. |
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[his elk-killing weapons] |
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[his game-killing weapons] |
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I didn't have time to count all of his elk-killing weapons, his game-killing weapons. |
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Tʲim, the son, was going. |
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When I notice it |
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I pulled back my right paw. |
83 |
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With an elk-biting, doom-bringing heart |
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I ran ahead from the side |
85 |
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with an elk-biting, doom-bringing heart, |
86 |
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with a game-biting, doom-bringing heart |
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I set myself against him. |
88 |
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[Again] [my big game-smell] |
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I repressed my big game-smell again. |
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Suddenly the two dogs as large as he-wolves appeared. |
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There is no deadfall den they have not smelled, |
92 |
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there is no tree-root den they have not smelled. |
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They went. |
94 |
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A branch crackled, my heart startled at it. |
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I look, Tʲim, the son, has appeared. |
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While he went along |
97 |
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I [his game-killing weapons] |
98 |
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[his elk-killing weapons] |
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looked well at his game-killing weapons, at his elk-killing weapons, |
100 |
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I counted them. |
101 |
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When I discern them |
102 |
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[my right paw] |
103 |
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I pulled my right paw back. |
104 |
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Again with a game-biting, doom-bringing heart, |
105 |
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with an elk-biting, doom-bringing heart |
106 |
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I ran ahead from the side. |
107 |
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With an elk-biting, doom-bringing heart |
108 |
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I set myself against him. |
109 |
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With a game-biting, doom-bringing heart |
110 |
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I set myself aganist him. |
111 |
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Suddenly the two dogs as large as he-wolves appeared. |
112 |
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There is no deadfall den they have not smelled, |
113 |
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there is no tree-root den they have not smelled. |
114 |
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[my large animal scent] |
115 |
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I let my large animal scent out, |
116 |
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the dogs take up (the scent). |
117 |
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Tʲim, the son, cries out: |
118 |
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In the course of our life |
119 |
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we have found nothing to fear. |
120 |
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[than us] |
121 |
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Who is more fearsome than us? |
122 |
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I ran towards Tʲim, the son. |
123 |
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[an eagle-wing feathered arrow at me] |
124 |
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When he lets loose an eagle-wing feathered arrow at me |
125 |
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I deflected it past the corner of my stomach. |
126 |
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When he slashes at me with the long hip-knife, |
127 |
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I deflected it past the corner of my stomach. |
128 |
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When he slashes at me with the big hip-axe |
129 |
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When I threw myself back |
130 |
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(only) my cheek hair [n.n.] grown this summer were cut off. |
131 |
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Our ten-fingered, twenty-fingered hands |
132 |
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came together. |
133 |
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Uncle, with the rising sun we (started) to fight, |
134 |
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with the setting sun we will push each other down. |
135 |
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If the ground is even we'll make it bumpy, |
136 |
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If the ground is bumpy, we'll make it even. |
137 |
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Whether we paced for a short time or a long time, |
138 |
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how should we know? |
139 |
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Suddenly I realized: |
140 |
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Where is the food basket of Tʲim, the son? |
141 |
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We stepped in that direction. |
142 |
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[bound by Tʲim, the son, himself] |
143 |
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[ In the shoulder straps of the food basket] |
144 |
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In the shoulder straps of the food basket bound by Tʲim, the son, himself his feet got entangled. |
145 |
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I pushed Tʲim, the son, down. |
146 |
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I sat down on him. |
147 |
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Are there any people to look for Tʲim, the son, or aren't there? |
148 |
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I tore off his right shoulder blade, |
149 |
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I tossed it up. |
150 |
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If there are any people to look for Tʲim, the son, |
151 |
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climb up and climb down (like) a red-bottomed woodpecker. |
152 |
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When I threw it up it fell back down. |
153 |
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There is nobody to look for Tʲim, the son. |