Just as there are different types of translation and different methods of translation, there are different techniques of translation.
Today we’re going to talk about translation techniques. Just as there are different types of translation and different methods of translation, there are different techniques of translation.
What is the difference between a translation method and a technique? It’s very simple: a translation method is applied to the entire text to be translated, while a translation technique may vary within the same text on a case-by-case basis depending on the specific verbal elements to be translated. The classical taxonomy of translation procedures dates back to 1958 and is the work of J. P. Vinay and J. Darbelnet. It consists of seven categories:
1. BORROWING
Borrowing is a translation technique that involves using the same word or expression in original text in the target text. The word or expression borrowed is usually written in italics. This is about reproducing an expression in the original text as is. In this sense, it is a translation technique that does not actually translate…
Example: The gaucho was wearing a black sombrero and a worn bombacha.
2. CALQUE
When a translator uses a calque, he or she is creating or using a neologism in the target language by adopting the structure of the source language.
Example: The German word handball is translated into Spanish as balonmano. Or the English term skyscraper is gratte-ciel in French or rascacielos in Spanish.
3. LITERAL TRANSLATION
Usually this is called a literal translation or metaphrase. This means a word-for-word translation, achieving a text in the target language which is as correct as it is idiomatic. According to Vinay and Darbelnet, a literal translation can only be applied with languages which are extremely close in cultural terms. It is acceptable only if the translated text retains the same syntax, the same meaning and the same style as the original text.
Example: Quelle heure est-il? ⇒ What time is it?
4. TRANSPOSITION
Transposition involves moving from one grammatical category to another without altering the meaning of the text. This translation technique introduces a change in grammatical structure.
Example: The President thinks that ⇒ Selon le Président
5. MODULATION
Modulation is about changing the form of the text by introducing a semantic change or perspective.
Example: Maybe you’re right. ⇒ Tu n’as peut-être pas tort.
6. EQUIVALENCE OR REFORMULATION
This is a translation technique which uses a completely different expression to transmit the same reality. Through this technique, names of institutions, interjections, idioms or proverbs can be translated.
Example: Chat échaudé craint l’eau froide. ⇒ Once burned, twice shy.
7. ADAPTATION
Adaptation, also called cultural substitution or cultural equivalent, is a cultural element which replaces the original text with one that is better suited to the culture of the target language. This achieves a more familiar and comprehensive text.
Example: baseball ⇒ football
Since the sixties, several authors (Michel Ballard, Hélène Chuquet, Michel Paillard, etc.) have established other methods of translation, such as explicitation (introducing specific details in the text of the target language), collocation (using a sequence of words that usually go together in the target language) and compensation (where an allusion or reference does not appear in one part of the text as in the source version, but later in the target text).
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