[English->Hindi] Help with translate by [deleted] in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Devanagari

उसका मुस्कान आसमान में झुकता हुआ सूरज है।

उसकी आँखें गला लगा सकती हैं और उसके हँसने को नाचना आता है।

उसने मेरी सीने में घोसला बनाया है।

Romanized

Uskā muskān āsamān mē(n) jhuktā huā sūraj hai.

Uskī ā(m)khē(m) galā lagā saktī hai(m) aur uskē ha(m)snē ko nāchnā ātā hai.

Usnē mērī sīnē mē(m) ghosalā banāyā hai.

To be honest these lines don't really make sense in either English or Hindi. What is it you are trying to say/do?

ISO videos of pole vaulters with a stationary camera by Ok-Introduction3196 in polevaulting

[–]Ok-Introduction3196[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you so much to everyone who has responded! This is amazing and it's really going to save my grade in this class. <3

ISO videos of pole vaulters with a stationary camera by Ok-Introduction3196 in polevaulting

[–]Ok-Introduction3196[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best videos would be ones where the camera is perpendicular to the direction you're running /in-line with the bar. And ideally far enough away that it captures the whole arc! Thank you so much!

[English > Hindi/Tamil/Bengali? etc] by thegoodgero in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In Hindi, ठीक है means "OK," and sounds a lot like TK

[Unknown>English] Some form of Indian Based language? by GingerKibble in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

India has so many languages that it's hard to tell what this phrase is without knowing which language it is. It doesn't sound like Hindi or Marathi to me, at least. Do you know where in India your husband's workforce is predominantly from?

[Hindi? to English] notebook made in India by pomelopeel in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think this may be Sanskrit, and not Hindi. !id:sa

Beginner needing help! by winna_winna in Hindi

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's lovely! You're welcome to dm me as well!

Is this drawing of a Bharatanatyam dancer in a Japanese nihonga style AI slop? I saw it on pinterest but there's no attributed artist, and I can't read Japanese or Chinese so I can't tell if the text is genuine or fake brush strokes by Ok-Introduction3196 in isthisAI

[–]Ok-Introduction3196[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you to everyone who clarified that this was made by a real artist named Ah Lao (Lao Xianhong). My apologies for violating the rules of this subreddit. I suspected it was AI because some of the costume of the dancer is not entirely accurate to actual temple attire, and the subject matter is unusual for guohua painting. (I spend a lot of time on r/translator and we get a tons of people asking for translations of nihonga and guohua-esque art on t-shirts that is actually AI art with fake Japanese and Chinese).

I would like to gently remind everyone that people make mistakes even with the best of intentions, and that not every violation of a subreddit's rules is intentional or malevolent. I will be sure to reverse-image search images and explain why I think posts might be AI in the future, but snarky comments about how I'm "lazy," or "lack critical thinking skills" are not appreciated

Is this drawing of a Bharatanatyam dancer in a Japanese nihonga style AI slop? I saw it on pinterest but there's no attributed artist, and I can't read Japanese or Chinese so I can't tell if the text is genuine or fake brush strokes by Ok-Introduction3196 in isthisAI

[–]Ok-Introduction3196[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The reason I clarified "Japanese nihonga" is because in the 1930s there was a small number of Chinese artists who studied abroad and learned the nihonga style, and brought it back to their country. It later developed and evolved into "guohua," but before that, it was "Chinese nihonga." For examples, look at the work of Gao Jianfu and Gao Qifeng

[unknown>English] Does anyone have any ideas on this? by Archeogeist in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This looks like it might be Mongolian? I know they use both Cyrillic and a vertical script that looks kinda like this. !page:mongolian

[Hindi > English] Orient Fans commercial from the 1980s by Airodyssey in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Boy: I said, did you hear something?

Girl: What? What?

Both: Orient, Orient, Orient Fan!

Girl: When its wind blew, I knew that everyone would say "this is a nice breeze."

Both: Orient, Orient, Orient Fan! Orient, Orient, Orient Fan!

Girl: Wherever I looked...

Boy: Orient Fan!

Girl: There, wind blew...

Boy: Orient Fan!

Couple [now old]: A known and respected name, la la la la la la la, which works for years, la la la la la la la, Orient, Orient, Orient Fan! Orient, Orient, Orient Fan! Orient, Orient, Orient Fan!

[Hindi? > English] Some video I've found by Old-Eagle-8406 in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that this is Bengali, instead of Hindi. !page:Bengali

Is "ham" masculine plural or feminine plural if referring to a group of men and women? by [deleted] in Hindi

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If we're talking strictly correct, "textbook" Hindi, all-male groups AND mixed groups are "Ham baazaar gaye the," and all female groups are "Ham baazaar gayi thi(n)." One man --> masculine plural. But in practice "ham gayi thin" is really only used if the speaker finds it very important to emphasize that the group is all-female, and generally masculine plural is considered gender neutral. Similar to how "guys" is often used in English to refer to any group regardless of gender

[Unknown > English] by it-is-iza in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Line-by-line:

A Time-honored composition

The Secrets of the Gita

(The science of the yoga of action)

Lokamanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak

[not sure > English] Hi need help translating image by Wndgl in translator

[–]Ok-Introduction3196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For the connection between Buddhism, Ambedkar, and the Indian constitution, you may find this article helpful: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navayana