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    11 Kommentare

    1. RecklessGeek on

      I was translating my site to German but the basic word „speed bump“ has been a challenge. Google Translate told me to use Geschwindigkeitsbegrenzung but it doesn’t even fit on the site lol.

      AI recommended Bodenschwellen, [so I’m using that now](https://speedbumpapp.com/de/). But a friend told me that’s not used at all… Any recommendations?

    2. IMO the bigger issue is that Germans wouldn’t use that as a figure of speech at all. I’m thinking here that you want to use ’speed bump‘ to mean „inconvenience, problem“ etc. But I gotta get back to my desk at work so someone else has to finish my thought.

    3. In this context you might as well use „Schlagloch“

      Thats a different thing (pot hole) but works the same way. Plus, its more commonly known and doesn’t sound like a 1:1 translation.

    4. Roadrunner571 on

      Please don’t try to translate texts word-for-word into other languages. That often doesn’t work.

      Like „Sucht-Apps“ can be interpreted as apps related to addictions. „süchtigmachende Apps“ would be more clear.

      And I don’t know if most Germans would get your speed bump analogy.

    5. JanniAkaFreaky on

      Almost every rhetoric you used is lost in translation anyway…
      The word not fitting is not the main problem imo

    6. Parapolikala on

      Your translators/localisers should be able to come up with an alternative that works.

    7. Yikes. The language isn’t your problem. It’s the auto translation. Get someone who can translate idioms for you 😆

    8. Actual-Garbage2562 on

      Use the English word. Younger Germans, I.e. the internet generations, will understand „speed bump“ just fine.

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