| Original Title | Dialect | Informant | Genre Form | Genre Content | ID | glossed | Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ʃɨʃər nʲeːl jarri | pelym mansi (PM) | Jeblankov, Feodor Ljepifanovich | prose (pro) | Mythological Texts (myt) | 1272 | glossed | – |
| Text Source | Editor | Collector |
|---|---|---|
| Kannisto, Artturi - Liimola, Matti (1951): Wogulische Volksdichtung gesammelt und übersetzt von Artturi Kannisto, bearbeitet und herausgegeben von Matti Liimola. I. Band. Texte mythischen Inhalts. In: Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne, 101. Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, 27-28. | Liimola, Matti | Kannisto & Liimola (KL) |
| English Translation | German Translation | Russian Translation | Hungarian Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| "A woodcock is carving an arrow" | – | – | – |
| by Riese, Timothy |
| Citation |
|---|
| Kannisto & Liimola 1951: OUDB Pelym Mansi Corpus. Text ID 1272. Ed. by Eichinger, Viktória. http://www.oudb.gwi.uni-muenchen.de/?cit=1272 (Accessed on 2025-11-01) |
| ʃɨʃər nʲeːl jarri (glossed version) |
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| A woodcock is carving an arrow. While carving, it is sitting bent forward. |
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| The birds gathered and come to the woodcock in an army. |
| 3 |
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| They came there, to the woodcock. |
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| The horned grebe and the black-throated loon say, you stay behind. |
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| We'll sneak up on it. |
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| They sneak up on it, the black-throated loon says to the horned grebe: you peck it in the kidney, I'll peck it in the heart. |
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| They sneaked up on it. |
| 8 |
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| The horned grebe pecked it in the kidney, the black-throated loon pecked it in the heart. |
| 9 |
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| When it jumped up, the horned grabe's ischia got stamped down, the black-throated loon's ischia got stamped down, the bridge of the scoter's beak was punched through by the arrow shaft. |
| 10 |
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| Then the swan says, I'll put on a white dress. |
| 11 |
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| The black-throated loon says, I'll put on a coat of mail. |
| 12 |
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| I'll put on a dress embroidered lengthwise. |
| 13 |
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| The scoter says, I'll put on a black smock. |
| 14 |
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| The goldeneye says, I'll put on armor. |
| 15 |
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| The tufted duck says, I'll put on a squirrel fur. |
| 16 |
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| They went. |
| 17 |
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| The younger brother came to the older brother. When he looks, his brother has been killed. |
| 18 |
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| Then he sat crying at his brother's head. |
| 19 |
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| From there he flew off as a woodcock. |
| 20 |
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| To this very day he flies about and to this very day he cries. |