Ritröð Guðfræðistofnunar - 01.09.1990, Side 203

Ritröð Guðfræðistofnunar - 01.09.1990, Side 203
Samanburður á Nýja testamentinu 1813 og 1827 categories of Nida and Louw in the Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament 1988. Various loci in the two Bible editions are compared with respect to the way in which Greek words for the body have been translated into Icelandic. Use is made of the concordance to the Icelandic Bible translation of 1981, a joint project of several research institutes of the University of Iceland and the first computerized concordance to the Icelandic Bible. The principle conclusion of the aforementioned comparison is that the word body (líkami) is used less frequently in the 1827 revised edition than in the edition of 1813. In place of expressions meaning "dead body", the word corpse (lík), which is not found in the New Testament of 1813, is employed. In the 1813 edition, the word carcass (hræ) was used for the Greek sóma, ptóma and kólon. In other instances, where a word means "living body", there is more variation; the 1827 uses man (maður), the personal pronoun / (ég), or the proper name Jesus (Jesú) where the 1813 edition uses body (líkami), life (líf, in one case only) or flesh (hold). Words with the meaning "the body of Christ" (líkami Krists) are generally rendered as body (líkami) in the 1827 edition, where flesh (hold) had been used in the 1813 edition. The translators of the 1827 edition evidently felt that the word flesh (hold) was too "meaty", so to speak, to be used in this connection. In the 1827 edition, the word hovel (hreysi) is abandoned as a translation for the Greek skenos, and tabernacle (tjaldbúð) used instead. The word hreysi includes the meaning element "of stone" in Old Icelandic, but not in Modem Icelandic. This illustrátes the way in which the vocabulary of the 1827 edition showed more variety than that of the 1813 edition, and increased conformity with contemporary usage. Uses of the words body (líkami) andflesh (hold) in ancient Icelandic texts, the Icelandic Sagas and the Sagas of the Sturlungs, are likewise compared with the 1813 Bible edition. In this connection, the new concordances for the Icelandic Sagas and the Sagas of the Sturlungs, produced at the University of Iceland, are employed. In these sagas, the word body (líkami) is more often used for "dead body" than "living body", and a bit more frequently for "the body of Christ" than the word flesh (hold)—the latter only in the Sagas of the Sturlungs, however, which describes Christian Iceland. The word flesh (hold) in the sagas is almost always used to mean "meat" (kjöt), with perhaps a single exception. In medieval Nordic translations of the Bible, the words body (líkami) andflesh (hold) correspond rather consistently to the Latin corpus and caro, and Latin usage may have largely determined the use of these terms in the oldest translations and in the oldest Icelandic translation of the New Testament from 1540. There, however, the word flesh (hold) is used for corpus Christi, and this translation is incorporated with few changes into the Bible edition of 1813. Thus, there is in many respects an unbroken tradition in Bible translation reaching from 1540 all the way down to 201 L
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