Installa Steam
Accedi
|
Lingua
简体中文 (cinese semplificato)
繁體中文 (cinese tradizionale)
日本語 (giapponese)
한국어 (coreano)
ไทย (tailandese)
Български (bulgaro)
Čeština (ceco)
Dansk (danese)
Deutsch (tedesco)
English (inglese)
Español - España (spagnolo - Spagna)
Español - Latinoamérica (spagnolo dell'America Latina)
Ελληνικά (greco)
Français (francese)
Indonesiano
Magyar (ungherese)
Nederlands (olandese)
Norsk (norvegese)
Polski (polacco)
Português (portoghese - Portogallo)
Português - Brasil (portoghese brasiliano)
Română (rumeno)
Русский (russo)
Suomi (finlandese)
Svenska (svedese)
Türkçe (turco)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamita)
Українська (ucraino)
Segnala un problema nella traduzione
The example that you gave goes to prove the incongruity of the names as they stand. There is a clear pattern that is being followed here, as opposed to a more abstract system of naming, and, as such, the most reasonable thing to do is to standardise word forms.
"We value prosperity tradition"
"We value mercantile tradition"
See? It's not just merely the same case, it's same freaking word in all of those cases.
Those are names, and names don't need to follow a single form, exactly because of the above reason - every name has an "eaten" word hiding in it's shadow it's that word that needs to follow form, not anything else in it's stead.