Glossary entry

Spanish term or phrase:

que va a tener

English translation:

who will get to benefit

Added to glossary by Philippa Smith
Sep 11, 2023 12:39
8 mos ago
33 viewers *
Spanish term

que va a tener

Spanish to English Bus/Financial Energy / Power Generation
I know this is a very simple construction, but I'm worried I'm missing a nuance.
It's someone being interviewed (so it's spoken) about a workshop; she says the workshop has given her new insights and different viewpoints, such as:
"el tema de conocer realmente las necesidades del usuario final, que va a tener nuestras propuestas."
This is a B2B electricity company which doesn't interact directly with the end user, I think she's saying "the end user who will benefit from our proposals" - have I got that right? Any fast help on this would be great - muchas gracias!

Proposed translations

+1
27 mins
Selected

who will (ultimately) get to benefit

As this is a simple future construction, grammatically speaking;
Note from asker:
Thanks Andrew - that's what I felt the meaning is here, great to have that confirmed!
Peer comment(s):

agree neilmac : I think you could omit "get to"...
4 hrs
Yep, thanks Neil;
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thanks for the nice quick response Andrew! This is what I went with (without "ultimately")."
+1
10 mins

who will receive

Not benefit, simply receive.
Note from asker:
Thanks Peter, but "receive" doesn't work - as I said, this company isn't in direct contact with end users (the people using the electricity) - it's like she's using a shorthand for "the people who will feel the benefit of the proposals we make to our clients (local authorities etc.)"
Peer comment(s):

agree cranesfreak : Agree. Regards :)
37 mins
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57 mins

what do our proposals offer?

If, as Philippa explains, the written ST is the transcription of the interviewee's spoken words, then maybe the phrase was intended to be a question:

... el tema de conocer realmente las necesidades del usuario final, que va a tener nuestras propuestas.
--> el tema de conocer realmente las necesidades del usuario final; ¿qué va a tener nuestras propuestas?

--> something along the lines of:

'... really getting to know the needs of end-users, and what do our proposals offer in response?

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Note added at 3 hrs (2023-09-11 15:46:27 GMT)
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Re Philippa's note:
The idea I was trying to express is that it might have been a so-called 'reflexive question'*, which would not be spoken in the same manner as a direct question addressed to a distant listener.

* https://www.quora.com/What-are-reflexive-questions-and-what-...

In any event, I firmly believe that que in this context means 'what' and not 'who'.
Note from asker:
Thanks Jennifer, I really like that as an idea, but listening closely to the video, she definitely doesn't speak it as a question!
Thanks for explaining your reasoning, but I'm afraid it is very clear when watching and listening to the woman speaking that she is not asking a question, reflexive or otherwise.
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5 hrs

who will be given

Another option.

Athough 'benefit' sounds more natural, the original doesn't say 'beneficiarse de nuestras propuestas'.
Note from asker:
Hi Helena, thanks for the answer, but the company doesn't "give" proposals to end users I'm afraid!
Peer comment(s):

neutral Andrew Bramhall : No, but sometimes you have to read between the lines;
47 mins
Andrew, thank you for your opinion :-)
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20 hrs
Spanish term (edited): que va/n a tener

that (is) are going to be covered by ...

Oddly enough, there are previous, glossary-related ProZ questions on this very phrase and that cast a different light on the meaning - without repeating the asker's own suggestion.

There is a general idea or consensus (National Gallery in London: 'concencus') that ... usuario final is the subject of que va a tener, rather than the latter being a somewhat loose (sloppy and slovenly, heat-induced?) Hispanic construction for necesidades 'que van a tener' nuestras propuestas', namely the subordinate clause refers back to somethjing else in, or the whole of, the main clause.
Note from asker:
Thanks Adrian, yes I'd already delved into both those previous questions. I think "covered by" is another good solution (as well as "benefit from" which is what I went with yesterday).
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