Glossary entry

Italian term or phrase:

abitano sugli alberi

English translation:

<translate literally>

Added to glossary by BdiL
Jul 11, 2012 17:07
11 yrs ago
Italian term

abitano sugli alberi

Italian to English Other Idioms / Maxims / Sayings From a Survey
tutti gli studenti abitano sugli alberi

This is from a survey for a luxury hotel. This is one of the responses. This is the entire response and I do not have the question. I'm thinking it's an idiom meaning, basically, that students can't afford to stay in luxury hotels. 1) am I on the right track and 2) can anyone think of an equivalent expression in English?

Thanks!
Proposed translations (English)
3 <translate literally>
Change log

Jul 13, 2012 11:33: BdiL Created KOG entry

Discussion

Dareth Pray (asker) Jul 13, 2012:
Thanks everyone! Thanks in particular to those who suggested the reference to Calvino. That was not something I picked up on. And thanks for assuring me that this was not some hip new idiomatic expression that I had never heard! I've decided to translate it literally because this was in no way the wackiest thing he put in this survey, so it goes along with his other responses.
Nora Mahony Jul 12, 2012:
I think it is a sort of reference to Calvino – they all do that book in school – but the gist is 'students would live anywhere', no?
bluedahlia Jul 11, 2012:
not an idiomatic expression Hy Dareth,

this is definitely not an idiomatic expression. I also think you should translate this literally.
Lara Barnett Jul 11, 2012:
Treehouses Could it have something to do with treehouses? The phrase could be literal or near literal.
http://www.storiecredibili.it/2010/08/il-piccolo-popolo-che-...
(If my link doesn't help, the pictures and details might fuel some ideas).
Dareth Pray (asker) Jul 11, 2012:
Hello Brigitte. That is an interesting possibility. Although this individual's level of discourse in his other responses wouldn't lead me to believe he's the type to quote literature. Although it's quite possible! I'll keep it in mind.
BrigitteHilgner Jul 11, 2012:
Maybe ... this refers to Italo Calvino's novel "The baron in the trees", trying to indicate that students break with tradtion?
Dareth Pray (asker) Jul 11, 2012:
Haha. Thanks Phil. It does sound like it! He has started just cursing out the survey now. For a while he was saying nonsense and now it's all curse words, which disappointingly I've been instructed to mark [foul language] (what's the fun in that?). I've never laughed so much doing a translation!
philgoddard Jul 11, 2012:
In that case I'd do a literal translation, all students live in trees. Sounds like he does.
Wendy Streitparth Jul 11, 2012:
Impossible to know for sure, but I'd say you're on the right track. The question could be something like "would you spend a night in our hotel?" As for an answer.... Students live in digs?
Dareth Pray (asker) Jul 11, 2012:
I've already asked, and I've been informed that the questions are 100% not available. Some of these answers are really ridiculous. I'm starting to think that there was one respondent who is just trying to be difficult. In one response he cursed out the reader, in another he compared the hotel to a used banana, talked about going to pluto...either my knowledge of Italian idioms is significantly more deficient than I initially thought or this guy was smoking something...
philgoddard Jul 11, 2012:
I think this is impossible without knowing the question. Customers will usually provide these if you ask.

Proposed translations

14 hrs
Selected

<translate literally>

A shot in the dark (lest more context is provided). If this is an individual answer, I deem the answerer is trying to convey the idea "why are you bothering with students? they usually (are broke and) don't stay at luxury hotels!". Of course this is the writer's sarcastic opinion and is not necessarily true.
Maurizio
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thanks. This is what I thought too. I translated it literally and put in an explanatory note, per client's instructions. "
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