Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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nʲələ kom joxtaːt, kʷælnə juwtuːt | eastern mansi (EM) | Semeon Alagulov (15.12.1904) Andrei Istanovitš Jutkin (27.12.1904) | prose (pro) | Bear Songs (bes) | 1549 | by Schigutt, Hannah | – |
Text Source | Editor | Collector |
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Kannisto, Artturi - Liimola, Matti, Wogulische Volksdichtung V. MSFOu, volume 116, p. 122-126 | Kannisto & Liimola (KL) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"The man from the upper course of the squirrel river, the sable river and the three sons of the old man Kērs" | – | – | – |
by Schigutt, Hannah - Riese, Timothy |
Citation |
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Kannisto & Liimola: OUDB Eastern Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1549. Ed. by Janda, Gwen Eva. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1549 (Accessed on 2024-11-14) |
nʲələ kom joxtaːt, kʷælnə juwtuːt (glossed version) |
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1 |
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Four men come, they enter the hut. |
2 |
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They ask: "What kind of loud hut do you have?" |
3 |
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"We have a bear hut." |
4 |
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"Where is that (animal)?" |
5 |
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"Here it sits." |
6 |
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"Come on, (it) has to be looked at." |
7 |
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Oh, this is a pile of moldy grass that has been lifted from between two lakes! |
8 |
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What are you drinking and eating?" |
9 |
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"We're drinking ale and small beer, a bear feast." |
10 |
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"We'll lie down and get ready to rest here." |
11 |
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The three sons of the old man Kērs get ready to lie down together. |
12 |
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The man from the upper course of the squirrel river, the man from the upper course of the sable river lies down to the side. |
13 |
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The three Kērs sons deliberate: "We'll prepare some food." |
14 |
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They got ready to prepare food. |
15 |
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One took his mitten, stuck it between his legs and says: "piss, piss piss, piss piss!" |
16 |
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He peed, there is no water. |
17 |
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He then puts pearl barley into it, started to stir, stirs, says: "slop, slop, slop, slop!" |
18 |
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He gives the other one to eat: "Eat!" |
19 |
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That one tastes it, eats. |
20 |
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He asks again: "Is it sweet?" |
21 |
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That one says: "Ew, it smells like urine!" |
22 |
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"Don't eat anymore, I am not giving you anymore to eat." |
23 |
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He gives the second man to eat, asks again: |
24 |
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"What does it taste like? |
25 |
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Is it sweet?" |
26 |
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The other man says:"It's sweet, sweet, sweet!" |
27 |
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They lay down, fell asleep. |
28 |
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The man from the upper course of the squirrel river, the man from the upper course of the sable river builds a fishing weir. |
29 |
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"I have built a fishing weir at my old father's river that stayed behind, at my old grandfather's rippling and mumbling river that stayed behind, |
30 |
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it's done, I am going home." |
31 |
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The three sons of Kērs got up. |
32 |
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"Let's go to the fishing weir of the man from the upper course of the lonely squirrel river, |
33 |
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let's go to the fishing weir of the man from the upper course of the lonely sable river!" |
34 |
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They went. |
35 |
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They sing: |
36 |
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"We are the three sons of old man Kērs, of old man Kērs. |
37 |
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We're going to look after the fishing weir of the man from the lonely squirrel river, from the lonely sable river." |
38 |
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They arrived (there). |
39 |
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They examined the fishing weir. |
40 |
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Then they took the fish out and smashed the fishing weir into pieces: |
41 |
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The man from the upper course of the lonely squirrel river, |
42 |
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the man from the upper course of the lonely sable river |
43 |
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let him go hungry!" |
44 |
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They went away. |
45 |
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The man from the upper course of the lonely squirrel river, the man from the upper course of the lonely sable river goes to his fishing weir. |
46 |
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He arrived there. |
47 |
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He looks: "What smashed the fishing weir into pieces?" |
48 |
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These three sons of old man Kērs smashed the fishing weir into pieces. |
49 |
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I've got a big nose, a big nose. |
50 |
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The three sons of old man Kērs |
51 |
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on which watery land or on which dry land shall I restrain them?" |
52 |
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He built his fishing weir anew and went home. |
53 |
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The three sons of old man Kērs |
54 |
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go to examine the fishing weir. |
55 |
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They examined the fishing weir, looted it and took away their looted fish. |
56 |
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The three sons of old man Kērs say: "Let's wait here for the man from the upper course of the lonely squirrel river, the man from the upper course of the lonely sable river!" |
57 |
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The man from the upper course of the lonely squirrel river, the man from the upper course of the lonely sable went to his small rippling and mumbling river. |
58 |
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He arrived there. |
59 |
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The three sons of old man Kērs (are) there. |
60 |
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When he comes to his fishing weir it has been smashed into pieces. |
61 |
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The man from the upper course of the lonely squirrel river, the man from the upper course of the lonely sable river stands and says: "You want to take from the watery land, |
62 |
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you want to take from the dry land, (take) your father's penis, (you) three sons of old man Kērs!" |
63 |
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They start to brawl. |
64 |
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They went at each other to brawl with wooden spears and wooden axes, |
65 |
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they fall over each other, they climb over each other. |
66 |
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They get dowsed with water. |
67 |
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The people sitting in the house yell: |
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69 |
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They stopped their brawling, stood up, went outside. |