Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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wɘtʲəp kum jeːri | middle lozva mansi (LM) | Pershä, Michail Grigorich | poetry/song (poe) | Fate Songs (fas) | 1401 | 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, 134-138. | Munkácsi, Bernát; Kálmán, Béla | Munkácsi, Bernát (MU) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"Song of the Orphaned Man" | – | – | – |
Citation |
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Munkácsi, Bernát 1896: OUDB Middle Lozva Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1401. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1401 (Accessed on 2024-11-14) |
wɘtʲəp kum jeːri (glossed version) |
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1 |
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Song of the Orphaned Man. |
2 |
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[three brothers] |
3 |
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[four brothers] |
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I, the man, raise three brothers, four brothers. |
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[man-raised] |
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[swelling hand-flesh] |
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I, the man raise man-raised swelling hand-flesh. |
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[swelling shoulder-blade flesh] |
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I, the man, raise swelling shoulder-blade flesh. |
10 |
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[legged animals going on foot] |
11 |
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We strive for the hearts of legged animals, |
12 |
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[winged animals flying with wings] |
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we strive for the hearts of winged animals. |
14 |
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After living for a long time |
15 |
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suddenly the three brothers |
16 |
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[on their sweat-soaked pillow-spot] |
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lie on their sweat-soaked pillow-spot, |
18 |
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[on their sweat-soaked bed-spot] |
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they lie on their sweat-soaked bed-spot. |
20 |
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Suddenly [their yellow silk-clothed souls] |
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they pull on their yellow silk-clothed souls, |
22 |
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[their red silk-clothed souls] |
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they pull on their red silk-clothed souls. |
24 |
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With a fine-edged marking hand |
25 |
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[in the black earth] |
26 |
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I smooth them out in the black earth. |
27 |
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With my two ten-fingered hands |
28 |
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[a gapless iron fence] |
29 |
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I make a gapless iron fence for them. |
30 |
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After living for a long time |
31 |
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after living for a short time |
32 |
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I observe rightly, |
33 |
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the store-room built by my father standing on a leg |
34 |
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has emptied out completely, |
35 |
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the store-room built by my grandfather standing on a leg |
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has emptied out completely. |
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I observe rightly, |
38 |
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[my branched tree with branches grown unaffected by the rain] |
39 |
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When did you grow, my branched tree with branches grown unaffected by the rain? |
40 |
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[my branched tree trunk unaffected by the wind] |
41 |
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When did you grow, my branched tree trunk unaffected by the wind? |
42 |
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[the booted Russian man's son] |
43 |
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[to the door opening] |
44 |
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[with a poor man's wrist] |
45 |
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Somehow I come with a poor man's wrist to the door opening of the booted Russian man's son, |
46 |
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[with a needy man's wrist] |
47 |
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somehow I come there with a needy man's wrist. |
48 |
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[with a piece of an old, discarded boot] |
49 |
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I, the man, came with a piece of an old, discarded boot |
50 |
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[with a piece of an old, discarded stocking] |
51 |
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I, the man, come there with a piece of an old, discarded stocking. |
52 |
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[on a knobby place of deep sleep] |
53 |
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When putting myself to sleep on a knobby place of deep sleep, |
54 |
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[on a knobby grinding shaft] |
55 |
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I put myself to sleep on a knobby grinding shaft, |
56 |
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[on a knobby axeshaft] |
57 |
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I put myself to sleep on a knobby axeshaft. |
58 |
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When being waked in the morning, |
59 |
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[by a knotted club of dry wood] |
60 |
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I am awakened by a knotted club of dry wood, |
61 |
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[by a knotted club of damp wood] |
62 |
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I am awakened by a knotted club of damp wood. |
63 |
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[of (my) reindeer-hunting land-cape] |
64 |
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I think of (my) reindeer-hunting land-cape, |
65 |
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[of my reindeer-hunting water-cape] |
66 |
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I think of my reindeer-hunting water-cape. |
67 |
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I hold fast to it with my breast, |
68 |
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I hold fast to it with my knees. |
69 |
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I was on my way for a long time, I was on my way for a short time, |
70 |
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Suddenly [where my father and grandfather lived] |
71 |
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when I came to the water-cape, to the land-cape where my father and grandfather lived, |
72 |
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they are overgrown by trees, they are overgrown by grass. |
73 |
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If on a spring day, |
74 |
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the guests going upstream by boat |
75 |
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the guests going downstream by boat, |
76 |
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[where my father and grandfather lived] |
77 |
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[at the land-cape, the water-cape] |
78 |
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[with the tip of their icy oars] |
79 |
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just ... with the tip of their icy oars at the land-cape, the water-cape where my father and grandfather lived, |
80 |
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[with the tip of their watery pushing poles] |
81 |
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they just ... with the tip of their watery pushing poles; |
82 |
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afterwards I found a village, I found a town. |
83 |
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[the seven middles of the rimed forest] |
84 |
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I go to the seven middles of the rimed forest. |
85 |
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[many storehouses like a heel] |
86 |
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I build a great number of storehouses like a heel, |
87 |
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[storehouses like a thumb] |
88 |
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I build a great number of storehouses like a thumb. |
89 |
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The many aunts of my uncle's house |
90 |
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[elk-hide gapped carrying straps] |
91 |
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wear out a great number of elk-hide gapped carrying straps. |
92 |
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After that, the guests going upstream by boat, |
93 |
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the guests going downstream by sled |
94 |
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are my guests at night, I detain them as guests by day. |
95 |
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[thin foxes running upstream] |
96 |
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I melt the ice of the thin foxes running upstream, |
97 |
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[thin wolves running downstream] |
98 |
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I melt the rime of the thin wolves running downstream. |