In the canonical trilinear representation, one L1 text line T is matched by two L2 lines, the morphological gloss and the free translation. The morphological gloss of T is interlinear in the sense that it is printed below T and above its free translation into L2. This entails a division of labor between the two L2 representations:

Consequently, the morphological gloss and the free translation do not double information, but elucidate each other. The free translation is the idiomatic semantic equivalent of the L1 line, the morphological gloss is a representation of its morphological structure. There is therefore no need for the translation to be particularly literal, just as there is no need for the morphological gloss to repeat the morphs that appear in the translation. For instance, a polysemous L1 item will be rendered by its contextual sense in the free translation, but by its generic meaning in the morphological gloss (Rule 7). Unnecessary parallelism between the two L2 lines is redundant; the trilinear canonical representation offers an occasion to provide additional information.

A supplement to the above may be made for examples in which the reader ignorant of L1 may need help to match the free translation with the gloss. This may happen in either of the following cases:

  1. The contextual sense of T does not bear any recognizable relationship to the morphological gloss.
  2. The syntax of the L2 translation differs completely from the syntax of T.

may illustrate case #b.

.balam-il=uka'hPedro
Colonial Mayatiger-ADVRA.3doPeter
Peter makes the tiger / Peter is like a tiger
(lit.: ‘tiger-like is what Peter does’; Motul s.v. cah3)

As shown, the idiomatic translation may be supplemented by a more literal translation in such a case.