Donate SIGN UP

does anybody speak non-Google German?

Avatar Image
wolf63 | 16:59 Tue 21st Aug 2012 | Society & Culture
9 Answers
I am working my way through a huge pile of old/vintage postcards to see if any of them are worth more than pennies. They will be sold either in our charity shop or on our website.

I have what feels like a zillion German cards - and I am finding that the Google translation is not coping. It isn't even coming up with really awful translations.

I have only started this for today and there are a couple of words that have me stumped.

"Pegnitzpartie" - it is a postcard of the Church of the Holy Ghost in Nurnberg and/or nuremberg. I can find similar cards but not this one.

The second is of a woman praying to a altar thingy in a wood - with Jesus hanging on his cross. It looks like a huge totem pole. "Parlenkirchen Josiphhichl" - I thought of church place to speak to Joseph as a general translation.

Help - please. Thunder has just started.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 9 of 9rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by wolf63. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Nuremberg is Nürnberg in German. The Pegnitz is a river flowing though it. Is part of the river visible in the photo?
Question Author
Yes - there is a river running alongside the building. I was hoping that the word would help me identify this particular card from the three hundred other cards of the same scene.

I found a postcard of the Hindleburg after it was scuppered in 1919 - the couple who donated these cards seem to have been keen travellers.

Thanks
Parlenkirchen ..is probably mispelt
It's probably Partenkirchen .As in Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Nuremberg must have had millions of postcards showing views of churches with or without the Pegnitz - no idea how you're going to find that one's worth more than another unless it's signed by Hitler or has an incredibly rare stamp (maybe one of those hyperinflation ones from between the wars). Good luck!
Could it be Partenkirchen? The name of a place in Bavaria. A lot of villages in that area have sort of totem poles.
I think you're probably trying to translate place names.
Question Author
Sue - place names are difficult as some are listed, on ebay for example, with the German spelling and others with the English version.

The Parlenkirchen could be partenkirchen - the writing on all of the cards is tiny.

jno - the church one is just one woman, kneeling in front of a pole which is in the middle of a forest. It's odd
possibly some sort of pilgrimage site or shrine. Sacred groves in forests often go back long before Christianity.

1 to 9 of 9rss feed

Do you know the answer?

does anybody speak non-Google German?

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.