Description: Three panels. The first panel is a picture of a sign on a window with Chinese that tells people to not to throw things out the window. There is a poor English translation on the sign that says “Do not shit in the air like a god.” The second panel is D.W. from Arthur glaring at the sign. The third panel is D.W. saying “That sign won’t stop me because I can’t read!”
has no meaning, “限位” is not to be used like this.
So is that a transcription error on my part, or is the original image nonsense?
Actually, I am wrong, there is actually a thing call 窗户限位, they put a device (called 限位器, “limiting device”) on the window to limit how far it opens. So that is what they meant by “the window is limited”.
Leads me to my next question: do you have any clue how the wrong translation came into existence?
No idea, the only words that are correctly translated are “请勿” > “Please do not”
You’re right, although it looks like they deliberately omitted some prepositions any conjunctions to save space. All the important elements are there, so it should be understandable by native speakers, but I guess that in speech, you would probably have to add a few more words in to make yourself understood a little more easily.
Interesting! Sounds like something that might be difficult for (early) machine translation, maybe before neural networks