Teodora & DJ Jerry - Moyat Nomer
Teodora:
Malka cherna roklia na golo
i goreshto tialo otdolu
zablujdava, che obeshtava
s teb da pravim sex.
DJ Jerry:
Nali go iskash ti, nedei ne me luji
tochno kogato poludiah ot mene trugvash si
Ne mojesh li sega, pone zvunni koga
kaji si samo nomera za kontakti s men.
Ref:
Moia nomer e da vbesiavam da si vrushtam, da razigravam
Moia nomer e da izpolzvam bez da mi e jal.
Moia nomer e da si trugna, posle nikoga da ne zvunna
hladno kato led e surtseto v mene, zaradi lujtsi tochno kato tebe.
Teodora & DJ Jerry - My Number/Trick
*In bulgarian number and trick has the same meaning. We use nomer if we want someones phone number or if we play a trick on someone.
Teodora:Little black dress
and hot body under it
This misleads you that
we will have sex
DJ Jerry:
You want it, don't you? Don't, don't lie me
exactly when you drove me crazy you're leaving me
Can't you do it now? At least say me when.
Tell me only your number for contacts with you
Ref:
My trick is to infuriate, to pay back, to lie
my trick is to manipulate without having pity
My trick is to leave, and never to call
My heart is cold like an ice because of liers just like you.
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Teodora & DJ Jerry - Moyat Nomer
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First song of Teodora, that get's a place on my mp3-player
Thank you for this post and translation! -
You're welcome!
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Thank you
------>Kaal ho na ho<------
------>Lebnan ya 2it3it sama<------
------>La 2ilaha 2illa allah<------ -
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I think namjera and namerenie are very close than namjera and nomer. As I already said nomer is used for playing tricks or asking someones phone number.
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"Nomer" is equal with "Number". It's came into Bulgarian thru Italian "numero" may be... The original Bulgarian word for Nubmer is Broj (Брой), but we use more frequently Nomer instead Broj. We use "broj" when we count.
It has another meaning in bulgarian, as Mitko92 said, it's when someone play some tricks. We say "Mръсен номер" (Mrusen nomer) = Dirty Trick. But we use the word Trick also, with the same meaning. "Трик" = Trick. -
Hello Athanatos and all others, maybe I can ask you something special. Sometimes it helps learning a language, when you have access to a compact etymology, which helps understanding word stems. For example for English there exists "The Concise Oxford Dictionary Of English Etymology" by T.F. Hoad and even online the Online Etymology Dictionary or for German the "Duden (Vol. 7) - Das Herkunftswörterbuch - Etymologie der deutschen Sprache". Does there exist a compact and easy available etymology for South Slavic languages, maybe even for Bulgarian?
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Sofijski Mozart, the answer is...Yes, of course
Specially for you:
Bulgarian Etimological Dictionary (Bulgarian Science Academy edition, scanned in PDF):
vol.1: http://promacedonia.com/ber_1/index.html
vol.2: http://promacedonia.com/ber_2/index.html
vol.3: http://promacedonia.com/ber_3/index.html
vol.4: ???
vol.5: http://promacedonia.com/ber_5/index.html
vol.6: http://promacedonia.com/ber_6/index.html
vol.7: not printed yet, but it's ready
vol.8: still in preparation
There's online dictionary, I just found it: http://rechnik.info/
Etimological Dictionary of Croatian/Serbian Language: http://promacedonia.com/skok/skok.htmlLast edited by Athanatos; 11-14-2010 at 12:54 PM.
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You're welcome!
It cost me nothing, just few clicks with mouse -
That’s one small click for you, one giant kick for me
added note: http://promacedonia.com is a priceless bonanza for me
Last edited by Sofijski Mozart; 11-15-2010 at 03:32 PM. Reason: note added