mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
363 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
363 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# German translation style guide (Richtlinien für die deutsche Übersetzung)
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Thank you for considering to contribute to the German translation!
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Before you start writing, please make sure that you have read the
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following general translation rules.
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## Rules
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### Formal or informal?
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**Informal.**
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Although written German tends to be quite formal, websites in German are
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usually following informal netiquette. As Zulip's guides are written
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in a more colloquial style, German translations should be rather informal as well.
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**Don't use slang or regional phrases in the German translation:**
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- Instead of _"So'n Dreck kann jedem mal passieren."_, you could
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say _"Dieser Fehler tritt häufiger auf."_
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- "Das ist die Seite, wo der Quelltext steht." - the "_wo_" is regional,
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say _"Das ist die Seite, auf der Quelltext steht."_ instead.
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### Gender-inclusive language
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**Use gender-inclusive language, placing a _gender colon_
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([Gender-Doppelpunkt](https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender-Doppelpunkt))
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where necessary.**
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Place the gender colon between the word stem and the feminine ending.
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- Instead of _Nutzer_, use _Nutzer:innen_
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- Instead of _dieser Nutzer_, use _diese:r Nutzer:in_
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**Try to find gender-neutral alternatives before using the gender colon.**
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- Instead of _jede:r_, try to use _alle_.
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**If a gender-neutral term is readily available, consider using it.**
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- Instead of _benutzerdefiniert_, consider using _eigen_.
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**In compound nouns, only use the gender colon in the last element, if appropriate.**
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- Instead of _Nutzer:innengruppe_ or _Nutzer:innen-Gruppe_, use _Nutzergruppe_.
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### Form of address
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**Use "Du" instead of "Sie".**
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For the reasons provided in [the previous section](#formal-or-informal),
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stick to _Du_ (informal) instead of _Sie_ (formal) when addressing
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the reader and remember to capitalize _Du_.
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### Form of instruction
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**Prefer imperative over constructions with auxiliary verbs.**
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For instructions, try to use the imperative (e.g., _"Gehe auf die Seite"_ -
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_"Go to the page"_) instead of constructions with auxiliary verbs
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(e.g., _"Du musst auf die Seite ... gehen"_ - _"You have to go the page ..."_).
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This keeps the phrases short, less stiff and avoids unnecessary addressing
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of the reader.
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### Rules for labels
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**Use continuous labels with verbs in infinitive form**
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To be consistent with other online platforms, use continuous labels for buttons,
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item titles, etc. with verbs in infinitive form,
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e.g., _Manage streams_ - _Kanäle verwalten_ instead of _Verwalte Kanäle_.
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### Concatenation of words
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**Try to avoid it.**
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German is famous for its concatenations of nouns
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(e.g., _Heizölrückstoßdämpfung_, which means _fuel oil recoil attenuation_).
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For the sake of correct rendering and simplicity, you should try to avoid such
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concatenations whenever possible, since they can break the layout of the Zulip
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frontend. Try to stick to a maximum length of 20 characters and follow your
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intuition.
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- A term like _Tastaturkürzel_ for _Keyboard shortcuts_ is fine - it is
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shorter than 20 characters and commonly used in web applications.
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- A term like _Benachrichtigungsstichwörter_ for _Alert words_ should
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not be used, it sounds odd and is longer than 20 characters.
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You could use "_Stichwörter, die mich benachrichtigen_" instead.
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### Anglicisms
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**Use them if other web apps do so and a teenager could understand the term.**
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Unlike other languages, German happily adapts modern words from English.
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This becomes even more evident in internet applications,
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so you should not be afraid of using them if they provide an advantage over
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the German equivalent. Take the following two examples as a reference:
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- Translating _Bot_: Use _Bot_, as a completely accurate German
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equivalent **doesn't** exist (e.g., _Roboter_) and the term _Bot_ is not
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unknown to German speakers.
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### Special characters
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**Use "ä, ö, ü" and "ß" consistently.**
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While _ä, ö, ü_ and _ß_ are more and more being replaced by _ae, oe, ue_
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and _ss_ in chats, forums and even websites, German translations
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containing umlauts have a more trustworthy appearance.
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For capitalizations, you can replace the _ß_ by _ss_.
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### False friends
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**Watch out!**
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A false friend is a word in another language that is spelled
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or sounds similar to a word in one's own language,
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yet has a different meaning.
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False friends for the translation from German to English include
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_actually_ - _eigentlich_, _eventually_ - _schließlich_, _map_ - _Karte_, etc.
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Make sure to not walk into such a trap.
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### Other
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- Try to keep words and phrases short and understandable. The front-end
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developers will thank you ;)
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- Be consistent. Use the same terms for the same things, even if that
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means repeating. Have a look at other German translations on Zulip
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to get a feeling for the vocabulary.
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- Balance common verbs and nouns with specific IT-related translations
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of English terms - this can be tricky, try to check how other resources
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were translated (e.g., Gmail, Microsoft websites, Facebook) to decide
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what wouldn't sound awkward / rude in German.
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- For additional translation information, feel free to check out
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[this](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Translating_German_WP) Wikipedia guide
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on translating German Wikipedia articles into English.
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Some terms are very tricky to translate, so be sure to communicate with other German
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speakers in the community. It's all about making Zulip friendly and usable.
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## Terms (Begriffe)
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- Message - **Nachricht**
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_"Nachricht" (Facebook, WhatsApp, Transifex)_
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- Direct Message (DM), Direct Messages (DMs) - **Direktnachricht (DM), Direktnachrichten (DMs)**
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While we try to avoid concatenating words whenever possible, "Direktnachricht" is used
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by many other platforms (e.g., X/Twitter, Slack, Discord).
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Use _DM_ with its plural form _DMs_ rather than DN/DNs in line with other services.
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_"Direktnachricht" (X/Twitter, Slack)_
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- Starred Message - **Markierte Nachricht**
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We go with "markiert" instead of "gesternt" (which is not even a proper
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German word) here, since it comes closer to the original meaning of "starred".
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_"Markierte Nachricht" (Gmail, Transifex),
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"Nachricht mit Stern" (WhatsApp)_
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_"Bereich" (Transifex), "Community" (Google+)_
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- Stream - **Stream**
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Even though the term **Stream** is not commonly used in German web applications,
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it is both understood well enough by many Germans with only little English
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skills, and the best choice for describing Zulip's chat hierarchy. The term
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"Kanal" wouldn't fit here, since it translates to "channel" - these are used
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by other chat applications with a simple, flat chat hierarchy, that is,
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no differentiation between streams and topics.
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_"Stream" (Transifex), "Kanal" (KDE IRC documentation, various
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small German forums)_
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- Topic - **Thema**
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_(Gmail - for email subjects, Transifex)_
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- Public Stream - **Öffentlicher Stream**
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While some might find this direct translation a tad long, the alternative
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"Offener Stream" can be ambiguous - especially users who are inexperienced
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with Zulip could think of this as streams that are online.
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_"Öffentlicher Stream" (Transifex)_
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- Bot - **Bot**
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Not only is "bot" a short and easily memorable term, it is also widely used
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in German technology magazines, forums, etc.
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_"Bot" (Transifex, Heise, Die Zeit)_
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- Integration - **Integration**
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While the German translation of "Integration" is spelled just like the English
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version, the translation is referring to the German term. For this reason,
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use "Integrationen" instead of "Integrations" when speaking of multiple
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integrations in German. There aren't many German sources available for this
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translation, but "Integration" has the same meaning in German and English.
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_"Integration/-en" (Transifex)_
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- Notification - **Benachrichtigung**
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Nice and easy. Other translations for "notification" like
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"Erwähnung", "Bescheid" or "Notiz" don't fit here.
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_"Benachrichtigung" (Facebook, Gmail, Transifex, Wikipedia)_
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- Alert Word - **Signalwort**
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This one is tricky, since one might initially think of "Alarmwort" as a proper
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translation. "Alarm", however, has a negative connotation, people link it to
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unpleasant events. "Signal", on the other hand, is neutral, just like
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"alert word". Nevertheless, [Linguee](https://www.linguee.de/deutsch-englisch/search?source=auto&query=alert+word)
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shows that some websites misuse "Alarm" for the translation.
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_"Signalwort" (Transifex), "Wort-Alarm" (Linguee)_
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- View - **View** (Developer documentation)
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Since this is a Zulip-specific term for
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> every path that the Zulip server supports (doesn’t show a 404 page for),
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and there is no German equivalent, talking of "Views" is preferable in the
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developer documentation and makes it easier to rely on parts of the German
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_and_ parts of the English documentation.
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- View - **Ansicht** (User-facing documentation)
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For user-facing documentation, we want to use "Ansicht" instead of "view",
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as "Ansicht" provides a translated description for what you think of when
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hearing "view". "Ansicht" is not desirable for the developer documentation,
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since it does not emphasize the developing aspects of views (in contrast to
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anglicisms, which Germans often link to IT-related definitions).
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_"Ansicht" (Transifex)_
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- Home - **Startseite**
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Nice and easy. "Zuhause" obviously doesn't fit here ;).
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_"Startseite" (Facebook, Transifex)_
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- Emoji - **Emoji**
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"Emoji" is the standard term for Emojis. Any other Germanized translation like
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"Bildschriftzeichen" (which exists!) would sound stiff and outdated. "Emoticon"
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works as well, but is not that common in German.
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_"Emoji" (Facebook, WhatsApp), "Emoticon" (Google+)_
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## Phrases (Ausdrücke)
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- Subscribe/Unsubscribe - **Abonnieren/Deabonnieren**
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This translation is unambiguous.
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_"Deabonnieren" (YouTube, Transifex)_
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- Narrow to - **Begrenzen auf**
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Transifex has two different translations for "Narrow to" -
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"Schränke auf ... ein." and "Begrenze auf ... ." Both sound a bit strange to a
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German speaker, since they would expect grammatically correct sentences when
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using the imperative (e.g., "Schränke diesen Stream ein auf ... .") Since this
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would be too long for many labels, the infinitive "begrenzen auf" is preferable.
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"einschränken auf" sounds equally good, but Transifex shows more use cases for
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"begrenzen auf".
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_"Schränke auf ... ein." (Transifex) "Begrenze auf ... ." (Transifex)_
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- Filter - **Filtern**
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A direct translation is fine here. Watch out to to use the infinitive instead
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of the imperative, e.g., "Nachrichten filtern" instead of "Filtere Nachrichten".
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_"Filtern" (Thunderbird, LinkedIn)_
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- Mute/Unmute - **Stummschalten/Lautschalten**
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"Lautschalten" is rarely used in German, but so is "Stummschaltung
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deaktivieren". Since anyone can understand the idea behind "Lautschalten", it is
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preferable due to its brevity.
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- Deactivate/Reactivate - **Deaktivieren/Reaktivieren**
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_"Deaktivieren/Reaktivieren" (Transifex)_
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- Search - **Suchen**
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_"Suchen" (YouTube, Google, Facebook, Transifex)_
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- Pin/Unpin - **Anpinnen/Loslösen**
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While "pinnen" is shorter than "anpinnen", "anpinnen" sweeps any amiguity out of
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the way. This term is not used too often on Zulip, so the length shouldn't be a
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problem.
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_"Anpinnen/Ablösen" (Transifex), "Pinnen" (Pinterest)_
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- Mention/@mention - **Erwähnen/@-erwähnen**
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Make sure to say "@-erwähnen", but "die @-Erwähnung" (capitalized).
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_"Erwähnen/@-Erwähnen" (Transifex)_
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- Invalid - **Ungültig**
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_"Ungültig" (Transifex)_
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- Customization - **Anpassen**
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The literal translation "Anpassung" would sound weird in most cases, so we use
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the infinitive form "anpassen".
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- I want - **Ich möchte**
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"Ich möchte" is the polite form of "Ich will".
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_"Ich möchte" - (Transifex, general sense of politeness)_
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- User - **Nutzer:in**
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"Benutzer:in" would work as well, but "Nutzer:in" is shorter and more commonly
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used in web applications.
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_"Nutzer\*innen" (Figma, Facebook), "Benutzer\*innen" (GitHub,
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Airtable), "Nutzer" (Facebook, Gmail), "Benutzer" (Transifex)_
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- Person/People - Personen
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We use "Personen" instead of plural "Nutzer:innen" for "people".
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_"Nutzer/Personen" (Transifex)_
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## Other (Verschiedenes)
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- You - **Du**
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Why not "Sie"? In brief, Zulip and other web applications tend to use a rather
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informal language. If you would like to read more about the reasoning behind
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this, refer to the [general notes](#formal-or-informal) for
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translating German.
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_"Du" (Google, Facebook), "Sie" (Transifex)_
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- We - **Wir** (rarely used)
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German guides don't use "wir" very often - they tend to reformulate the
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phrases instead.
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_"Wir" (Google, Transifex)_
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