1. Role of translation


Pragmatics of translation



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1 Role of translation pragmatics of translation To\'lqinova Mohinur

2. Pragmatics of translation
Words in language are related to certain referents which they designate and to other words of the same language with which they make up syntactic units. These relationships are called semantic and syntactic, respectively. Words are also related to the people who use them. To the users of the language its words are not just indifferent, unemotional labels of objects or ideas. The people develop a certain attitude to the words they use. Some of the words acquire definite implications, they evoke a positive or negative response, they are associated with certain theories, beliefs, likes or dislikes. There are “noble” words like “ honour, dignity, freedom “, etc. and “low” words like “infamy, cowardice, betrayal”. Words can be nice or ugly, attractive or repulsive. Such relationships between the word and its users are called “pragmatic”.
The pragmatic implications of a word are an important part of its meaning that produces a certain effect upon the Receptor. Of even greater significance is the pragmatic aspect of speech units. Every act of speech communication is meant for a certain Receptor, it is aimed at producing a certain effect upon him. In this respect any communication is an exercise in pragmatics.
Since the pragmatic effect plays such an important part in communication, its preservation in translation is the primary concern of the translator, though it is by no means an easy task. The pragmatic aspect of translation involves a number of difficult problems.
3. Listening scripts
Rob
Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Rob.
Sam
And I’m Sam.
Rob
When we think about famous figures in the history of science, the name of Charles Darwin often comes up.
Sam
Darwin is most famous for his theory of evolution, the idea that animals change and adapt in response to their environment. In the 1830s he visited the Galapagos, a string of islands in the Pacific Ocean famous because of the unique animals living there.
Rob
It was while in the Galapagos, observing small birds called finches, that Darwin started forming his theory of evolution. But today, the animals of the Galapagos face the same pressures as animals across the world because of the effects of man-made climate change.
Sam
Warming sea waters and more frequent extreme weather events are affecting animals as much as humans, so, in this programme, we’ll be asking ‘can animals evolve to deal with climate change?’
Rob
But first I have a question for you, Sam, and it’s about Charles Darwin’s trip to the Galapagos. In 1831, Darwin set sail around the world, collecting samples of flora and fauna, the plants and animals, of the places he visited. But what was the name of the ship he sailed in?
a) HMS Beagle
b) HMS Victory
c) SS Great Britain
Sam
Hmm, maybe it was B. HMS Victory.
Rob
Are you sure?
Sam
No.
Rob
OK. I’ll reveal the correct answer later in the programme. Now, it may have been the Galapagos finches that started Charles Darwin thinking about how animals adapt to their environment but, as naturalist, Kiyoko Gotanda explained to BBC World Service programme The Climate Question, Darwin’s first impression of the small birds wasn’t very good: Kiyoko Gotanda
When Darwin got to the Galapagos Islands, he actually wasn’t that interested in the finches – they were kind of a drab colour and didn’t have a very interesting song. He sampled, though, the finches from different islands, and so when he got back to England he was looking at all the variation in beak shape and size, and body size and shape, and he was recalling how certain finches were found on certain islands but not on other islands
Rob
In contrast to more colourful birds like Galapagos parrots, the finches Darwin observed were drab, dull and boring-looking, with little colour.
Sam
Instead, what Darwin noticed were variations in the finches’ beak – the hard,pointed part of a bird’s mouth. Finches born with a beak that could help them get more food were more likely to survive and have babies. Over time, as the birds passed on their successful genes, they adapted to fit in with their environment – what we know as evolution.
Rob
So, if animals can evolve to survive their environment, can they also evolve to cope with the impact humans are having on the climate?
Sam
Well, there’s already some evidence to show they can. Studies on birds in the Brazilian Amazon and red deer on the Isle of Rum, in Scotland, show warmer temperatures have caused animals to evolve smaller bodies. It’s easier to keep cool when you’re small!
Rob
American conservationist Thor Hanson records and measures anole lizards in the Caribbean. He wants to see how the effects of man-made climate change, in this case hurricanes, is affecting the lizards. Listen to what Thor found out as he speaks with presenters of BBC World Service’s The Climate Question.
Jordan Dunbar
What you can see is that large toe pads and strong front legs give some lizards a tighter grip.
Kate Lamble
When they do start to let go and their body starts flapping in the air like a flag, smaller back legs reduce the drag, and allow them to cling on and survive the hurricane.
Thor Hanson
So the survivors were those lizards with those characteristics, and they passed those traits along to their offspring.
Rob
Thor’s lizards developed stronger front legs and smaller back legs, allowing them to cling on, hold on to something tightly, when hurricanes pass through.
Sam
It’s this trait, a genetically-determined characteristic, that allows the lizards to survive, and is passed on to their babies. Thor checked other areas of the Caribbean where hurricanes were frequent and found the same traits in lizards there, proof of evolution in action. But whereas we often think of evolutionhappening over hundreds, even thousands of years, the changes in the Caribbean lizards happened in around forty years, something that would have surprised Charles Darwin. Which reminds me of your question, Rob.
Rob
Yes, I asked you for the name of the ship Darwin sailed around the world in Darwin’s ship was called the HMS Beagle and, appropriately enough, it was named after an animal - a beagle is a type of dog. OK, let’s recap the vocabulary from this programme about evolution, the way living things adapt to their environment and pass these adaptations on to their children.
Sam
Flora and fauna is another way of saying the plants and animals of a place.
Rob
Drab means dull and colourless in appearance.
Sam
A bird’s beak is the hard, pointed part of its mouth.
Rob
To cling on means to hold on very tightly.
Sam
And finally, a trait is a genetically-determined characteristic. Once again, our six minutes are up! Join us again soon for more interesting topics and useful vocabulary here at 6 Minute English. Goodbye for now!
Rob
Bye!
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