Hello,
Randomly stumbled upon this community.
Maybe you can crosspost to !forumlibre@jlai.lu ? It's a generic french Speaking community with 400 monthly active users, I'm sure someone can help you out there
The French language
Hello,
Randomly stumbled upon this community.
Maybe you can crosspost to !forumlibre@jlai.lu ? It's a generic french Speaking community with 400 monthly active users, I'm sure someone can help you out there
thanks!
As written, it really seems like the correct translation is "tends to". I've never seen this used in law texts and why is a law written this way in the first place??? But then again i don't have much law experience so maybe it's really common?
I can at least tell you I've never ever ever seen "tend" being used to mean "shall".
Are you saying tends is not a false friend and the French and English meanings are quite similar? Because in English that word is astonishing in this legal context. Commercial translation tools are often better quality than Argos, so I was more tempted to trust the commercially translated version.
(edit) tends has a couple different meanings in English. One might have a tendency to do something or feel something. You might also tend to a store, which means to oversee something. Perhaps it’s that latter meaning that is intended by lawmakers. That the telecom operator oversees agreement.
Yes. It is equally as astonishing in french. In simple terms the law you're quoting says "generally speaking, ISPs will most likely try to obtain consent". Why this is a law at all makes no sense to me.
I don't think this works here. You see it in this form in the phrase "je tend a mes affaires" (I am tending to my own business) which is incredibly old fashioned and doesn't work here anyway.
Perhaps it’s that latter meaning that is intended by lawmakers.
I thought so, too. My HOA mandates that I tend to my yard. However, if they meant that, I'd think they'd use the verb "occuper".
It's hard to translate. I would sum up like this :
And all constructions project are validated by the mayor.