How does interpretation work at the United Nations? - By Christopher Beam - Slate Magazine - http://www.slate.com/id...
Sep 25, 2009
from
τorƍue,
Anne Bouey,
Bret Taylor,
Marisol Munoz Pedrals,
Ryoko Omachi,
Pandu ● IT Optimizer,
Richard Chen,
Kishore Balakrishnan,
Shakeel Mahate,
Berci Mesko, MD,
and
Твоё первенство и эго
liked this
"Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi delivered a rambling address to the United Nations in New York City on Wednesday morning, calling Barack Obama "our son" and railing against the U.N. Security Council. He spoke not in Arabic, Libya's official language, but a local Libyan dialect. Does the United Nations have an interpreter for every dialect in the world? No. Speakers at the United Nations are supposed to deliver their speeches in one of the organization's six official languages: English, French, Spanish, Russian, Arabic, and Chinese. U.N. interpreters then translate the lecture into the other five languages. If the speaker doesn't use an official language—either as a political statement or because he doesn't know one—the speaker has to bring along his own interpreter. That interpreter then translates into one of the official languages—usually English or French—and the other interpreters translate from that interpretation."
- Shannon Jiménez
A surprisingly relevant article for my work. Thanks Shannon!
- τorƍue
No problem. What are you doing that involves the UN and/or interpreters?
- Shannon Jiménez
More of the later. :)
- τorƍue
Say, what kind of tools do you use for your work? Do you ever use Google's Translation Toolkit?
- τorƍue
I use Trados, since it is more or less the industry standard. I haven't tried Google yet, but I keep meaning to check it out.
- Shannon Jiménez
Google's beta translation toolkit is nicely built (http://translate.google.com/toolkit), but we have concern about TOS: "You may not modify, rent, lease, loan, sell, distribute or create derivative works based on this Content (either in whole or in part) unless you have been specifically told that you may do so by Google or by the owners of that Content, in a separate agreement." and "By submitting your content through the Service, you grant Google the permission to use your content permanently to promote, improve or offer the Services. If Google publicly displays any of the content you submitted through the Service, Google will display only portion(s) and not the entirety of the content at one time."
- τorƍue