different between translate vs munge
translate
English
Etymology
From Middle English translaten (“to transport, translate, transform”) [and other forms], and then from:
- Anglo-Norman tranlater, translater, and Middle French, Old French translater (“to translate from one language into another; to move something from one place to another; to transfer a bishop from one see to another; to relocate (a saint's relics)”) (modern French translater); and
- their etymon Latin tr?nsl?tus (“carried, conveyed; handed over; transferred”), the perfect passive participle of tr?nsfer? (“to bring or carry across or over, transfer, transport; to translate from one language to another; to use figurative; to change, transform”).
Tr?nsl?tus is derived from tr?ns- (prefix meaning ‘beyond’) + l?tus (“borne, carried”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *telh?- (“to bear, endure; to undergo”)), the irregular perfect passive participle of fer? (“to bear, carry”). The English word is cognate with Catalan traslladar (“to transfer”), Irish trasladar (“to move something from one place to another; to transfer; to translate”), Italian traslatare, Late Latin translatare (“to translate from one language into another; to transfer a bishop from one see to another; to relocate (a saint's relics); to transcribe”), Old Occitan transladar, translatar, traslatar, Portuguese transladar, trasladar (“to move something from one place to another; to translate”), Spanish trasladar, transladar (“to move; to transfer; to translate; to copy, transcribe; to transmit”).
The word displaced Middle English awenden (“to change; to translate”) (from Old English ?wendan), Middle English irecchen (“to explain, expound, interpret”) (from Old English ?ere??an), and Old English ?eþ?odan (“to engage in; to translate”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /t???nz?le?t/, /t?ænz-/, /t???ns-/, /t?æns-/
- (General American) IPA(key): /t?ænz?le?t/, /t?æn(t)s-/, /?t?ænz?le?t/, /?t?æn(t)s-/
- (General New Zealand) IPA(key): /?t??nzlæet/, [?t????nz?æe??]
- Rhymes: -e?t
- Hyphenation: trans?late
Verb
translate (third-person singular simple present translates, present participle translating, simple past and past participle translated)
- Senses relating to the change of information, etc., from one form to another.
- (transitive) To change spoken words or written text (of a book, document, movie, etc.) from one language to another.
- Synonym: overset
- (intransitive) To provide a translation of spoken words or written text in another language; to be, or be capable of being, rendered in another language.
- (transitive) To express spoken words or written text in a different (often clearer or simpler) way in the same language; to paraphrase, to rephrase, to restate.
- (transitive) To change (something) from one form or medium to another.
- (transitive, music) To rearrange (a song or music) in one genre into another.
- (transitive, music) To rearrange (a song or music) in one genre into another.
- (intransitive) To change, or be capable of being changed, from one form or medium to another.
- (transitive, genetics) To generate a chain of amino acids based on the sequence of codons in an mRNA molecule.
- (transitive) To change spoken words or written text (of a book, document, movie, etc.) from one language to another.
- Senses relating to a change of position.
- (transitive, archaic) To move (something) from one place or position to another; to transfer.
- (transitive) To transfer the remains of a deceased person (such as a monarch or other important person) from one place to another; (specifically, Christianity) to transfer a holy relic from one shrine to another.
- (transitive, Christianity) To transfer a bishop or other cleric from one post to another.
- (transitive, Christianity) Of a holy person or saint: to be assumed into or to rise to Heaven without bodily death; also (figuratively) to die and go to Heaven.
- (transitive, mathematics) In Euclidean geometry: to transform (a geometric figure or space) by moving every point by the same distance in a given direction.
- (transitive, mathematics) To map (the axes in a coordinate system) to parallel axes in another coordinate system some distance away.
- (transitive, medicine, obsolete) To cause (a disease or something giving rise to a disease) to move from one body part to another, or (rare) between persons.
- (transitive, physics) To subject (a body) to linear motion with no rotation.
- (intransitive, physics) Of a body: to be subjected to linear motion with no rotation.
- (transitive) To transfer the remains of a deceased person (such as a monarch or other important person) from one place to another; (specifically, Christianity) to transfer a holy relic from one shrine to another.
- (transitive, archaic) To move (something) from one place or position to another; to transfer.
- (transitive, obsolete) To entrance (“place in a trance”), to cause to lose recollection or sense.
Usage notes
- Translation (sense 1.1) is often used loosely to describe any act of conversion from one language into another, although formal usage typically distinguishes interpretation as the proper term for conversion of speech.
- While translation attempts to establish equivalent meaning between different texts, the conversion of text from one orthography to another (attempting to roughly establish equivalent sound) is distinguished as transliteration.
- Literal, verbatim, or word-for-word translation (metaphrase) aims to capture as much of the exact expression as possible, while loose or free translation, or paraphrase, aims to capture the general sense or artistic affect of the original text. At a certain point, text which has been too freely translated may be considered an adaptation instead.
Conjugation
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
Noun
translate (plural translates)
- (mathematical analysis) In Euclidean spaces: a set of points obtained by adding a given fixed vector to each point of a given set.
Translations
References
Further reading
- translation on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- translation of axes on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- translation (biology) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- translation (ecclesiastical) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- translation (geometry) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- translation (physics) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- translation (relic) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- translation (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- alterants, tarletans
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /t???.slat/
Verb
translate
- first-person singular present indicative of translater
- third-person singular present indicative of translater
- first-person singular present subjunctive of translater
- third-person singular present subjunctive of translater
- second-person singular imperative of translater
Latin
Participle
tr?nsl?te
- vocative masculine singular of tr?nsl?tus
Middle English
Verb
translate
- Alternative form of translaten
translate From the web:
- what translates mrna
- what translates dna
- what translate mean
- what translate english to spanish
- what translates an assembly language program
- what translate in hindi
- what translate to japanese
- what translates rna
munge
English
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /m?nd??/
- Rhymes: -?nd?
Verb
munge (third-person singular simple present munges, present participle munging, simple past and past participle munged)
- (transitive, computing, informal) To transform data in an undefined or unexplained manner, as for example when data wrangling requires nonsystemic or nonsystematic edits.
- 2011, Brian Knight, Ketan Patel, Wayne Snyder, Professional Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Administration
- As a part of the code review with the development team, notify them that you want to have these options as a part of the installation script, rather than you munging the installation scripts during deployment.
- 2011, Brian Knight, Ketan Patel, Wayne Snyder, Professional Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Administration
- (transitive, computing, informal) To add a spamblock to (an email address).
- 1998, Alan Schwartz, Simson Garfinkel, Stopping spam
- Munging is effective — it prevents unwanted email from reaching you by keeping your real email address out of the clutches of the address-harvesting programs.
- 1998, Alan Schwartz, Simson Garfinkel, Stopping spam
- (transitive, genealogy, informal) To corrupt a record about an individual by erroneously merging in information about another individual.
Alternative forms
- mung
Derived terms
- data munging
Translations
Italian
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -und?e
Verb
munge
- third-person singular present indicative of mungere
munge From the web:
- munge meaning
- what munger means
- munger what happened
- what does minge mean
- mungesa what is in english
- what is munger incident
- what is munge food
- what does monger mean
you may also like
- translate vs munge
- change vs munge
- munge vs mangle
- mungs vs munge
- lunge vs munge
- mungo vs munge
- backend vs database
- backend vs app
- backend vs vendor
- backend vs web
- assets vs backend
- retire vs resting
- relaxing vs resting
- dormant vs resting
- resting vs restring
- resting vs renting
- resting vs cresting
- westing vs resting
- rusting vs resting
- restring vs restringe