theartichoke
Senior Member
English - Canada
Hi everyone,
We're talking here about someone who was sentenced to 15 years in prison but let out after serving 13. The speaker is a woman who killed her husband in a blind rage after he gambled away her life savings -- this is the last line of the story, coming right after she says, Ho fatto tredici anni, so there's no further information at all on why Due me ne hanno condonati.
I want to be accurate (so if "condonare" in this context has a specific meaning that translates to a specific word in English, that would be good to know), but it also has to be short and natural-sounding, something an ordinary person would say, nothing too technical or sophisticated. The best English phrase that occurs to me is "They knocked two off for good behaviour," which would also be perfect for my context, as the speaker is a model of good behaviour, aside from one unpremeditated murder. But can condonare refer to time off for good behaviour? Is that even a concept in the Italian prison system? The conversation takes place in the early to mid 1950s, if that's of any use.
We're talking here about someone who was sentenced to 15 years in prison but let out after serving 13. The speaker is a woman who killed her husband in a blind rage after he gambled away her life savings -- this is the last line of the story, coming right after she says, Ho fatto tredici anni, so there's no further information at all on why Due me ne hanno condonati.
I want to be accurate (so if "condonare" in this context has a specific meaning that translates to a specific word in English, that would be good to know), but it also has to be short and natural-sounding, something an ordinary person would say, nothing too technical or sophisticated. The best English phrase that occurs to me is "They knocked two off for good behaviour," which would also be perfect for my context, as the speaker is a model of good behaviour, aside from one unpremeditated murder. But can condonare refer to time off for good behaviour? Is that even a concept in the Italian prison system? The conversation takes place in the early to mid 1950s, if that's of any use.