13:45 Apr 24, 2006 |
English to Norwegian translations [PRO] Social Sciences - Social Science, Sociology, Ethics, etc. | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Selected response from: William [Bill] Gray Norway Local time: 09:06 | ||||||
Grading comment
|
Summary of answers provided | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
4 +1 | konsentrasjon |
| ||
5 | concertation: the agreement to work in concert |
|
Discussion entries: 2 | |
---|---|
konsentrasjon Explanation: Skrivefeil In the first article, I looked at a weaker but, nevertheless significant, linear relationship between a measure called "Social Concentration" and a measure called the "Exhaustion Index". -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 1 hr (2006-04-24 14:56:58 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Jeg ser at det er mange Google-treff, men jeg tror fremdeles det er en skrivefeil eller til nød annen stavemåte, - aluminum, aluminium - det passer med konsentrasjon i sammenhengen og er et kjent uttrykk. |
| |
Login to enter a peer comment (or grade) |
concertation: the agreement to work in concert Explanation: Hi Sigrid! Yes, it is a typo, but not the one suggested so far. You will find the web link enlightening. I guess it is a loan from French, but my French is not good enough to be sure on this. Maybe others have an opinion on that. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 18 hrs (2006-04-25 07:57:18 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- rådslagning Thanks for your response, Sigrid. Sorry, I didn't try to find the Norwegian equivalent. Now I have found a couple of web links, which supports your suggestion for "rådslagning" and I am sure cover what I have read about concertation in other places. http://home.online.no/~steinny/kap2/raadslagning.htm http://norway.icomos.org/charter/chartreno.pdf (in this latter, the translation "rådslagning" is given for "consultation", but I imagine concertation is a relatively new word(?). Reference: http://www.eurofound.eu.int/areas/industrialrelations/dictio... |
| ||
Grading comment
| |||
Notes to answerer
| |||
Login to enter a peer comment (or grade) |
Login or register (free and only takes a few minutes) to participate in this question.
You will also have access to many other tools and opportunities designed for those who have language-related jobs (or are passionate about them). Participation is free and the site has a strict confidentiality policy.