Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
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ʃɘːt kum æk asməl kujjət | north vagilsk mansi (NV) | Lochtjin, Gavril Semeomovitch | prose (pro) | Riddles (rid) | 1265 | by Wolfauer, Anna | – |
Text Source | Editor | Collector |
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Kannisto, Artturi - Liimola, Matti (1963): Wogulische Volksdichtung gesammelt und übersetzt von Artturi Kannisto, bearbeitet und herasgegeben von Matti Liimola.VI Band. Schicksalslieder, Klagelieder, Kinderreime, Rätsel, Verschiedenes. In: Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne, 134. Helsinki: Soumalais-Ugrilainen Seura, 182-184 | Liimola, Matti / Lochtjin, Ivan Gavrilov | Kannisto & Liimola (KL) |
English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
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"A hundred men sleep on one pillow" | – | – | – |
by Riese, Timothy |
Citation |
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Kannisto & Liimola 1963: OUDB Northern Vagilsk Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1265. Ed. by Wolfauer, Anna. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1265 (Accessed on 2024-11-25) |
ʃɘːt kum æk asməl kujjət (glossed version) |
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A hundred man sleep on one pillow. |
2 |
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House beams. |
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Nobody makes it, it makes it itself. |
4 |
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A crack in the beam. |
5 |
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Two brothers have put on one belt. |
6 |
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Fence poles. |
7 |
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In an iron house a man is rotting. |
8 |
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A nutcore. |
9 |
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Two ovens are cleaned with one poker. |
10 |
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A cow licks its nostrils with its tongue. |
11 |
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Four women piss into one hole. |
12 |
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A cow is being milked. |
13 |
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Four women covered themselves with one cloth. |
14 |
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A table. |
15 |
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A snake has wound itself around a pine. |
16 |
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A barrel hoop. |
17 |
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A sheep drops dung onto its back. |
18 |
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A scraper. |
19 |
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A sheep bends itself in sleep. |
20 |
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A chuwal. |
21 |
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Without arms and legs it creeps up the sloping bank. |
22 |
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Water is rising. |
23 |
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Horses with foals go down to the water, horses come up from the water heavy with young. |
24 |
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Water buckets. |
25 |
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Two mice bite each other, bite each other, foam comes out of the corners of their mouths, there is no way to restrain them. |
26 |
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A hand mill. |
27 |
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Underneath the big sky a little sky is snowing. |
28 |
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Flour is being sifted. |
29 |
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Higher than a tree, (when) it falls, lower than the grass. |
30 |
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An arrow. |
31 |
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The pike turns its tail, in the rear a ridge of land forms. |
32 |
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Hay is being mown. |
33 |
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Two sables dashed to a birch. |
34 |
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Rods on the side of a knapsack. |
35 |
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A silver dish on the bottom of the water. |
36 |
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A burbot liver. |
37 |
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(On) the bottom of the water is [n.n.] |
38 |
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A fish trap. |