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7th ProZ.com Translation Contest: "Sports" » English to German

Competition in this pair is now closed.

Source text in English

Winters used to be cold in England. We, my parents especially, spent them watching the wrestling. The wrestling they watched on their black-and-white television sets on Saturday afternoons represented a brief intrusion of life and colour in their otherwise monochrome lives. Their work overalls were faded, the sofa cover—unchanged for years—was faded, their memories of the people they had been before coming to England were fading too. My parents, their whole generation, treadmilled away the best years of their lives toiling in factories for shoddy paypackets. A life of drudgery, of deformed spines, of chronic arthritis, of severed hands. They bit their lips and put up with the pain. They had no option but to. In their minds they tried to switch off—to ignore the slights of co-workers, not to bridle against the glib cackling of foremen, and, in the case of Indian women, not to fret when they were slapped about by their husbands. Put up with the pain, they told themselves, deal with the pain—the shooting pains up the arms, the corroded hip joints, the back seizures from leaning over sewing machines for too many years, the callused knuckles from handwashing clothes, the rheumy knees from scrubbing the kitchen floor with their husbands' used underpants.

When my parents sat down to watch the wrestling on Saturday afternoons, milky cardamon tea in hand, they wanted to be enter­tained, they wanted a laugh. But they also wanted the good guy, just for once, to triumph over the bad guy. They wanted the swaggering, braying bully to get his come-uppance. They prayed for the nice guy, lying there on the canvas, trapped in a double-finger interlock or clutching his kidneys in agony, not to submit. If only he could hold out just a bit longer, bear the pain, last the course. If only he did these things, chances were, wrestling being what it was, that he would triumph. It was only a qualified victory, however. You'd see the winner, exhausted, barely able to wave to the crowd. The triumph was mainly one of survival.

The winning entry has been announced in this pair.

There were 19 entries submitted in this pair during the submission phase. The winning entry was determined based on finals round voting by peers.

Competition in this pair is now closed.


Entries (19 total) Expand all entries

Entry #5632
Winner
Voting points1st2nd3rd
448 x43 x26 x1
Rating typeOverallQualityAccuracy
Entry3.093.30 (10 ratings)2.88 (8 ratings)
Entry #5642
Andrea Winzer
Andrea Winzer
United States
Voting points1st2nd3rd
399 x41 x21 x1
Rating typeOverallQualityAccuracy
Entry3.092.88 (8 ratings)3.29 (7 ratings)
Entry #5849
Ulrike Möller (X)
Ulrike Möller (X)
Germany
Voting points1st2nd3rd
315 x45 x21 x1
Rating typeOverallQualityAccuracy
Entry3.283.45 (11 ratings)3.11 (9 ratings)
Entry #5318
Voting points1st2nd3rd
214 x42 x21 x1
Rating typeOverallQualityAccuracy
Entry3.633.50 (4 ratings)3.75 (4 ratings)
Entry #5807
Sabine Voigt
Sabine Voigt
United States
Voting points1st2nd3rd
204 x42 x20
Rating typeOverallQualityAccuracy
Entry3.453.57 (7 ratings)3.33 (6 ratings)
Entry #5833
Voting points1st2nd3rd
153 x41 x21 x1
Rating typeOverallQualityAccuracy
Entry3.003.00 (6 ratings)3.00 (6 ratings)
Entry #4982
Voting points1st2nd3rd
141 x44 x22 x1
Rating typeOverallQualityAccuracy
Entry3.053.38 (8 ratings)2.71 (7 ratings)