20:35 Jun 1, 2016 |
Czech to English translations [PRO] Social Sciences - Science (general) | ||||
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Summary of answers provided | ||||
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4 | life tentant / retired person; married |
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Discussion entries: 1 | |
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life tentant / retired person; married Explanation: The occupation from Jakub was "vymenkar" (life tentant, > german: Ausgedinger) "Výměnkář" is like a Pensioner, A parent(s) gives up ownership of their house and land to an adult child, who in turn has a legal and formal responsibility to care for the parents until their Lord and Creator calls them home (life). Kronika rodu Karlíků - Újezdec ujezdec.unas.cz/kronika_rodu_karlik.pdf datumu narození) v Hornosíně, jako manželský syn Josefa Karlíka a jeho ženy ..... Vdovec a výměnkář Václav přežil svojí manželku Marii přesně o čtyři roky. "výminkář" or "výměnkář" = retired (person) Life estate - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_estate In common law and statutory law, a life estate is the ownership of land for the duration of a person's life. In legal terms it is an estate in real property that ends at death when ownership of the property may revert to the original owner, or it may pass to another person. The owner of a life estate is called a "life tenant". http://boards.ancestry.com/thread.aspx?mv=flat&m=10209&p=loc... When you get to adjectives, the rules are altered. The grandfather was a "retired farmer". Well, we got the "sedlaka" part really being accusative for sedlak. But what is this výměnkáře? It's the adjective for "retired" and note how when it is modifying an accusative it ends in "e", not "a"? All I can say is that if both adjective and noun had the same ending, it just wouldn't sound good. Sing-songy, kind of the rhyming words I say to our parakeet. But having alternate endings makes the language truly melodic. There's enough letters there that you can look in a dictionary and make an educated guess about the adjective. However, I couldn't find výměnkáře in my dictionary. In the English side, "retired" didn't work, either. That's why we need aksamitnik. Language from 150 years ago used different words. (What is a "crofter" anyhow?) And if you ever find a Czech dictionary from the early 20th century, buy it! (Because the language usage would be closer to the 19th century language.) The only one I have is my grandfather's for the Czech speaker learning English, and I can't make it work for me." ----- Leni, mám rodné listy babičky (rok narození 1909) a dědy (1904) a u obou je jejich původ (manželský) a také původ a oba rodiče jejich rodičů (např: MATKA: Terezie, manželská dcera Vincence Slámy, rolníka v Želeticích a Terezie, narozené v roce 1884). Podle mě je Anna nemanželská. (L) Teta je historička a udělala náš velký rodokmen až do 16 století (L) http://www.mimibazar.cz/rodinne_foto.php?id=4291645&user=0&o... Archiv auditoria 2007:4-6 - Genea www.genea.cz/informace/stara-genea/.../archiv-auditoria-200... 1922 podle matricniho zapisu z r. 1900; je to tedy doslovny opis, tj. vztahuje se krizek k roku 1900? ... vystavovat. Takze musel byt zapsan i v katolicke matrice, protoze jinak by nemohl dostat treba krestni list. ...... stalo manzelske,takze v dalsich zapisech (svatba, narozeni jeho deti) je dany clovek jiz uvaden jako manzelsky. (The marriage was concluded, so that in future listings (weddings, births of his children) the person is already been mentioned as a couple. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 1 hr (2016-06-01 21:45:42 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Německo – Český | Genealogie genealogie.nka.cz/?page_id=214 Ausgedinger – výměnkář, Grundanwärter – dědic gruntu, Priester – kněz .... eheleiblich – manželský, manželská, Kerzenziehe – svíčkař, voskař, Taschner http://www.serak.cz/kdo_cim.htm#vyminkar |
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