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1.
When idioti (Idiotic) becomes "Fluffy" : translation sudents and the avoidance of target-language cognates por
  • Malkiel, Brenda
Series Meta Volume 54, numéro 2, juin 2009 ; v. 54, n. 2Temas: ESTUDIANTES; FALSOS COGNADOS; METODOLOGÍA DE LA INVESTIGACIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCION DEL/AL HEBREO; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; INVESTIGACIÓN EN TRADUCCIÓN.
Origen: Meta, volume 54, numéro 2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, juin 2009
Resumen: Cognate translation is neither a simple nor a straightforward matter. Given the risk that a word that appears to be a true cognate may actually be a false cognate, and given the sometimes fuzzy boundary between true and false cognates, translators and translation students have been shown to "play it safe" by casting around for noncognate translations for true cognates, rather than choose the obvious cognate translation. Here we ask whether translation students avoid cognate translations even when the target-language cognate is both accurate and appropriate and whether this phenomenon is related to fear of false friends. The findings indicate that translation students do seek out noncognate translations and that performance on true cognates correlates with performance on false cognates.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

2.
Think-aloud protocols : a useful tool for investigating the linguistic aspect of translation por
  • Künzli, Alexander
Series Meta Volume 54, numéro 2, juin 2009 ; v. 54, n. 2Temas: ASPECTOS LINGUISTICOS; COGNICION; FRANCÉS - ALEMÁN; FRANCÉS - SUECO; METODOLOGÍA DE LA INVESTIGACIÓN; SOCIOLINGUISTICA; TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ALEMAN; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL FRANCÉS; TRADUCCION DEL/AL SUECO; VOZ; INVESTIGACIÓN EN TRADUCCIÓN.
Origen: Meta, volume 54, numéro 2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, juin 2009
Resumen: Think-aloud protocols (TAPs) have often been used to study the cognitive aspect of translation. This paper shows their usefulness for investigating the linguistic aspect of translation. Examples are drawn from material collected in 40 think-aloud sessions over several years. The participants were professional translators or trainee translators. The language pairs involved are French-German and French-Swedish. The translational linguistic problems discussed fall into the following categories: a) grammatical (the interpretation of French participial clauses), b) textual (the use of connectors), c) functional (different realizations of one and the same linguistic function in French on the one hand, and in German and Swedish on the other), and d) sociolinguistic (the rendering of the formal vous into Swedish by the more formal ni or the less formal du)
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

3.
Foreign Is not unfamiliar : a translation impact study involving Taiwan subjects por
  • Wang, Qianting
  • Chen, Hui-Wen
  • Zhong, Yong
Series Meta Volume 54, numéro 2, juin 2009 ; v. 54, n. 2Temas: BEIJING; ENCUESTAS; METODOLOGÍA DE LA INVESTIGACIÓN; TAIWAN; TRADUCCIONES; INVESTIGACIÓN EN TRADUCCIÓN.
Origen: Meta, volume 54, numéro 2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, juin 2009
Resumen: The research discussed in this paper is the last of a trilogy investigating the impact of foreignized and domesticated translations on sampled readers. The two precursors had been conducted in two Chinese Mainland cities (Beijing and Guangzhou) and this last one was conducted in the Taiwanese city of Douliou. Therefore, comparisons can be made with the two precursors in the discussion of the research procedure and findings of the Taiwan project. The paper begins with a brief introduction of the background in which the Taiwan project was conceived and a brief profile of the subjects sampled for the project. Then there is a description of the research design, including the hypotheses and field work methodology. Four hypotheses were tested: a) the subjects would have distinguishable ideas about the two renditions; b) they would have a more intense feeling of exoticism when reading the foreignized rendition; c) their degree of sensing the rendition to be exotic or not would be correlated with their other socio-linguistic perceptions of that text; d) the findings of the present investigation would corroborate those obtained from the two precursors. The description of the research design is followed by a presentation of the data analysis conducted for the project together with a statement of the conventions adopted for reading the statistics. Based on the data analysis, interpretations are made in relation to the hypotheses.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

4.
Finding translations : on the use of bibliographical databases in translation history por
  • Poupaud, Sandra
  • Pym, Anthony
  • Torres Simón, Ester
Series Meta Volume 54, numéro 2, juin 2009 ; v. 54, n. 2Temas: BASES DE DATOS; BIBLIOGRAFIAS; BIBLIOMETRIA; ESTUDIOS DE TRADUCCIÓN; HISTORIA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; INDEX TRANSLATIONUM; TRADUCCION DEL/AL COREANO; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; INVESTIGACIÓN EN TRADUCCIÓN.
Origen: Meta, volume 54, numéro 2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, juin 2009
Resumen: In any study of translations one must first decide what is to be counted as a "translation" and how such things are to be found, usually through recourse to bibliographical databases. We propose that, starting from the maximalist view that translations are potentially everywhere, various distribution processes impose a series of selective filters thanks to which some translations are more easily identified and accessible than others. The study of translation must be aware of these prior filters, and must know how to account for them, and sometimes how to overcome them. Research processes then necessarily impose their own selective filters, which may reduce or extend the number and kinds of translations given by prior filters. We present three research projects where the play of prior and research filters is very different. For one-off large-scale relational hypotheses, the Index Translationum is found to be relatively cost-efficient. For more detailed objects such as translation flows from Spanish into French in a specific period, a book-industry database offers significant advantages. And for a study marked by a paucity of texts, as is the case of translation from Korean into English following the Korean War, a combination of databases is necessary, the most useful turning out to be Amazon.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

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