Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Portuguese term or phrase:
a salto
English translation:
hopping the border
Portuguese term
a salto
Thanks in advance for any help you can give!
3 | hopping the border | T o b i a s |
4 +4 | sneaking/fleeing across the border | Barbara Cochran, MFA |
5 | Jumping the border | Nick Taylor |
Feb 10, 2018 22:31: T o b i a s changed "Level" from "Non-PRO" to "PRO"
PRO (3): Gilmar Fernandes, Matheus Chaud, T o b i a s
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Proposed translations
hopping the border
https://www.thebrokebackpacker.com/backpacking-laos/
At least we won't have to deal with them hopping the border if there is no border to hop: The annexation of Mexico has always been a possibility.
http://www.debate.org/opinions/polls/should-the-united-state...
But to "hop the border" in civilian clothes, was breaking Swiss Federal Law, and this was imposed by the Swiss with rigour, under the Hague Conventions. Those "internierten" caught hopping the border soon found themselves in Swiss Federal prisons, where conditions were a far cry from the Swiss evader camps.
http://www.anzacpow.com/Part-3-Neutral-Countries/1.-switzerl...
sneaking/fleeing across the border
Thanks :) And I agree, Gilmar, it should be PRO. But it's my first time posting a question and, when I tried to edit it to make it PRO, I couldn't figure out how to do it... Sorry about that. |
agree |
Gilmar Fernandes
: Yes and this should be a PRO question.
2 mins
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Thank you, Gilmar.
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agree |
Matheus Chaud
11 mins
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Thank you, Matheus.
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agree |
Douglas Bissell
: Sneaking, Yes from P to S and fleeing the other way, depending on the historical period
5 hrs
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Thank you, Douglas.
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agree |
Margarida Ataide
2 days 1 hr
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Thank you, itineuropa.
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Discussion