Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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tɘːxtəŋ pɔiləŋ marko aːŋk jeːri | middle lozva mansi (LM) | Pershä, Michail Grigorich | poetry/song (poe) | Fate Songs (fas) | 1388 | by Eichinger, Viktoria | – |
Text Source | Editor | Collector |
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Munkácsi, Bernát (1896): Vogul népköltési gyüjtemény. In: IV. kötet. Életképek. Elsö füzet. Vogul szövegek és fordításaik. Budapest: Magyar tudományos akadémia, 97-102. | Munkácsi, Bernát; Kálmán, Béla | Munkácsi, Bernát (MU) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"Song of Marko, a young woman from Tɘːxtəŋ Village" | – | – | – |
Citation |
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Munkácsi, Bernát 1896: OUDB Middle Lozva Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1388. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1388 (Accessed on 2024-11-26) |
tɘːxtəŋ pɔiləŋ marko aːŋk jeːri (glossed version) |
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Song of Marko, a Young Woman from Tɘːxtəŋ Village. |
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Which young woman recited this little song? |
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Which young woman recited this little tale? |
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It's a little song recited by the young woman Marko, |
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it's a little tale recited by the young woman Marko. |
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Crane-calling hundred areas are |
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my father's hundred areas. |
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[one grain of corn] |
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I plant one grain of corn outside. |
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[many oats at the side of the fallen tree] |
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I, the young woman, plant many oats at the side of the fallen tree. |
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A foggy steep slope is |
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the steep slope of my village harbor. |
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Suddenly [Wolja Mouth Village] |
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the news reaches me of a wooing party from Wolja Mouth Village. |
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Suddenly like about two hawks [from Wolja Mouth] |
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the Wolja Mouth five-legged woman-wooing party arrives. |
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My brother Kuosi's |
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large larch-wood door |
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[with a hand carrying black game (fur) as a bride-prize] |
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is opened with a hand carrying black game (fur) as a bride-prize. |
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[five nights and days] |
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For the duration of five days and nights the door opens and closes. |
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[my brother Kuosi] |
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When my brother Kuosi moves the wall-beams with his back, |
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[the bones of a spring fish] |
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the wall-beams bend like the bones of a spring fish. |
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Suddenly my uncle Jeri, |
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he comes in, for some reason [his throat, his tongue] |
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he clears his throat, his tongue. |
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Little brother! |
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[we] [her] |
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[an arrow quiver of black iron] |
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We should hand her an arrow quiver of black iron. |
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[the young woman enveloped in a shawl] |
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[an arrow-quiver of black iron] |
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This night the young woman enveloped in a shawl was handed an arrow-quiver of black iron. |
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[suddenly on the wood marked with a hundred marks] |
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How shall I mark (the presents) on the wood marked with a hundred marks, |
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[on the wood marked with a hundred marks] |
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When shall I count (the presents) on the wood marked with a hundred marks? |
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For five days and nights |
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the people drink and celebrate. |
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Afterwards, which man |
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[by my thin-sinewed arm] |
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[in a troop of saddled horses] |
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leads me by my thin-sinewed arm in a troop of saddled horses? |
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[by the hawk of Wolja-mouth] |
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I am led by the hawk of Wolja-mouth. |
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[carved by a Russian man with notched boots] |
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[on the five-legged, six-legged sled] |
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The young woman is set on the five-legged, six-legged sled carved by a Russian man with jointed boots. |
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I am led for a long or a short time, |
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[to a house, to a storehouse built at the same time] |
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I, the young woman, am brought to a house, to a storehouse built at the same time. |
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I am brought in. |
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When I look around, |
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there is no nail without game hanging on it, |
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there is no nail without sable hanging on it. |
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We live for a long or a short time, |
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Then [the ten, the many boys of Tɘːxtəŋ Village] |
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[the many sons of my father] |
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when I have a good mood, I sing of the ten, of the many boys of Tɘːxtəŋ Village, of the many sons of my father like this: |
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[titmouse feathered, resounding hundred] |
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My father's many, many titmouse-feathered, resounding hundred sons, |
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If I have a bad mood, I sing like this: |
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(You are) a dog-chewed, wind shadow, |
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(you) ten, many youths of Tɘːxtəŋ Village, |
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[my father's Tɘːxtəŋ Village ten, many, many sons] |
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on the day you, my father's Tɘːxtəŋ Village ten, many, many sons occur to me, young woman, |
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[to the thickness of dry straw] |
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I, the young woman, dried out to the thickness of dry straw, |
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[to the thickness of dry grass] |
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I, the young woman, dried out to the thickness of dry grass. |
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[my uncle Jeri, my brother Kuosi] |
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While waiting for my uncle Jeri, my brother Kuosi, I go outside, |
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[thick as the fur of a winter squirrel] |
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the young woman gets covered in hoarfrost as thick as the fur of a winter squirrel. |
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Suddenly I look to the end of the river stretch with an end, |
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ten hoarfrost-headed horses |
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are running there. |
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The two men, my brother Kuosi, my uncle Jeri |
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come to land like a bird alighting, |
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the two men fly along like flying birds. |
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[my father's many, many sons] |
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As if you cut apart a rotten rope, my father's many, many sons |
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[to my village with a square] |
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the two stream to my village with a square like birds alighting. |
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[to the beer keg with seven bungholes before them] |
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I got to the seven-bungholed beer keg. |
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They two [three days and nights] |
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[(in) their drunkenness of drunk men] |
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they drank three days and nights (in) their drunkenness of drunk men, |
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[their inebriation of inebriated men] |
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they celebrated in their inebriation of inebriated men. |