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Example sentences for "translation from"

  • That old horse is lame of one leg, one of our very usual forms of expression, which is merely a translation from bacach ar aonchois.

  • The expression the dear knows (or correctly the deer knows), which is very common, is a translation from Irish of one of those substitutions.

  • His only other attempt in poetry during those weeks was a translation from a sonnet of Ronsard, whose works Taylor had lent him and from whom he got some hints for the names and characters of his Titans.

  • But when Baldelli came to prepare it for the press he found manifest indications of its being a Translation from the French.

  • And we have demonstrated that this ruder Latin is a translation from an Italian copy.

  • Passages showing additionally the errors, or other peculiarities of a translation from a French original, common to the Italian and the Latin.

  • He brought me one day, in a very modest mood, a translation from Goethe, which I was most happy to oblige him by inserting.

  • Origines vpon the Maudeleyne' must have been a translation from a piece attributed to Origen.

  • Layamon's poem is a translation from a poem by Wace, entitled Brut; and Wace borrowed from Geoffrey of Monmouth.

  • This passage, by the way, is a translation from Boccaccio, Teseide, xi.

  • It is interesting to note here by way of parallel that a few years later the regeneration of Bulgaria from its centuries of darkness began with a small work on geography, a translation from an American school-book, published at Smyrna.

  • From the contents we learn that one of them is a translation from BĂ©ranger, the other from the Russian.

  • Whenever the word Romance occurs in these metrical narratives, it hath been thought to afford decisive proof of a translation from the Romance, or French language.

  • As the Author was discharging his Pistols in a Garden, Two Ladies passing near the spot were alarmed by the sound of a Bullet hissing near them, to one of whom the following stanzas were addressed the next morning] Translation from Catullus.

  • Translation from the 'Medea' of Euripides [L.

  • Translation from an Unpublished Work of Herodotus ii.

  • A translation is at best a dislocation, a translation from verse to prose is a double dislocation and corresponding further dislocations are necessary if an effect of deformity is to be avoided.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "translation from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    above them; admit women; allowed them; around the; canned fruit; deep forest; great tree; her heart; historical interest; important matter; large share; least not; little monkey; mental hygiene; other grain; particular things; save her; seemed good; seen the; the house; the supreme; translation from