At long last, I've got my hands on the third edition of the "Dictionnaire de la comptabilité et de la gestion financière" by Louis Ménard et al.
Only took my 2 1/2 years from the date of publication in Canada!
Thoroughly recommend getting hold of the CD-ROM. Shame there's no Mac interface but you can't have your cake....
28 March 2014
9 February 2014
Exclamation marks and "over-punctuating" in French
It's reporting season so I'm translating a considerable amount of analyst commentary on corporate earnings.
When a figure is startlingly good, it is often followed by an exclamation mark.
As writers of English, our initial reaction might be simply to drop the "!". But I'm concerned that we may be loosing a nuance. Example:
Des prises de commandes en hausse de 5.2% pour 2013, dont 20% a/a at T4 !
I translated the last part of the sentence as:
... with a 20% surge in Q4 2013.
(Don't worry about specifying the year-on-year (a/a); it is automatically understood in the Anglosphere).
We must get rid of the extra punctuation but we need a nice powerful noun to avoid loosing some of the original's meaning.
When a figure is startlingly good, it is often followed by an exclamation mark.
As writers of English, our initial reaction might be simply to drop the "!". But I'm concerned that we may be loosing a nuance. Example:
Des prises de commandes en hausse de 5.2% pour 2013, dont 20% a/a at T4 !
I translated the last part of the sentence as:
... with a 20% surge in Q4 2013.
(Don't worry about specifying the year-on-year (a/a); it is automatically understood in the Anglosphere).
We must get rid of the extra punctuation but we need a nice powerful noun to avoid loosing some of the original's meaning.
2 February 2014
"The nature and genius of the German language"
This is the name of a mammoth tome published by philologist Daniel Boileau in 1840.
Can't say I've read it all but, at one point, he draws attention to the fact that words in German are often cleverly formed by uniting two known ideas.
Listening to the radio, I heard "nun ein Ausschnitt von...", literally a "cut-out". And now, an excerpt from...
In English, we have "excerpt", formed from ex- (out of) and carpere (pluck).
Any German speaker would recognise the two stand-alone words aus and Schnitt. It's harder to spot "carpere"...
Can't say I've read it all but, at one point, he draws attention to the fact that words in German are often cleverly formed by uniting two known ideas.
Listening to the radio, I heard "nun ein Ausschnitt von...", literally a "cut-out". And now, an excerpt from...
In English, we have "excerpt", formed from ex- (out of) and carpere (pluck).
Any German speaker would recognise the two stand-alone words aus and Schnitt. It's harder to spot "carpere"...
I do snow...
As many an English native speaker knows, we have lost control of the English language. Words keep cropping up everywhere and while we recognise the form, the substance has changed.
Classic Frenglish examples are, of course, le lifting or le brushing (a simple blow-dry). Incidentally, the Germans have scored a point for us by taking the French verb friser and coming up with the noun Friseur (hairdresser or barber - NB: Coiffeur tends to be used in Switzerland).
I once asked a Swiss friend if she skied and she replied Non, je fais du snow.
She makes snow...
Nonsense to ears attuned to English. The word snowboard has been shortened to snow by the youth of today. Having the word neige in French ensures there is no confusion.
So, as Hank the Yank would say, "What's the takeaway?" (Two cod and chips plus a pot of mushy peas, please).
Annual report season is upon us and, as ever, the word reporting is ubiquitous. Do we blindly translate it as "reporting" or "reported information", "company data", etc. The context will decide.
Still, let's be careful out there (!) when translating English words that have been hijacked by other languages.
Classic Frenglish examples are, of course, le lifting or le brushing (a simple blow-dry). Incidentally, the Germans have scored a point for us by taking the French verb friser and coming up with the noun Friseur (hairdresser or barber - NB: Coiffeur tends to be used in Switzerland).
I once asked a Swiss friend if she skied and she replied Non, je fais du snow.
She makes snow...
Nonsense to ears attuned to English. The word snowboard has been shortened to snow by the youth of today. Having the word neige in French ensures there is no confusion.
So, as Hank the Yank would say, "What's the takeaway?" (Two cod and chips plus a pot of mushy peas, please).
Annual report season is upon us and, as ever, the word reporting is ubiquitous. Do we blindly translate it as "reporting" or "reported information", "company data", etc. The context will decide.
Still, let's be careful out there (!) when translating English words that have been hijacked by other languages.
14 January 2014
Capita court interpreting contract letting down courts and taxpayers
I'd like to draw attention to this press release on the ITI website:
http://www.iti.org.uk/news-media-industry-jobs/news/544-pi4j-press-release-17-million-lost-in-translation
I heart about this contract with Capital from a friend a couple of years ago. He told me that court interpreters had been "fired" and told that they now had to work through Capita.
This is probably another example of a civil service mandarin trying to compress costs that cannot be reduced: quality interpreting costs money, especially when the stakes are as high as in the criminal justice system!
It's a shameful business and whoever is responsible should be run out of town, although he or she will probably get a year-end bonus regardless of performance plus a gold-plated pension...
http://www.iti.org.uk/news-media-industry-jobs/news/544-pi4j-press-release-17-million-lost-in-translation
I heart about this contract with Capital from a friend a couple of years ago. He told me that court interpreters had been "fired" and told that they now had to work through Capita.
This is probably another example of a civil service mandarin trying to compress costs that cannot be reduced: quality interpreting costs money, especially when the stakes are as high as in the criminal justice system!
It's a shameful business and whoever is responsible should be run out of town, although he or she will probably get a year-end bonus regardless of performance plus a gold-plated pension...
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