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Tricky Terms In Legal Translation from and to English: Stepping up to the Classroom Challenge

Authors :
Ondřej Klabal
Source :
Hermes, Iss 64 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Aarhus University, 2024.

Abstract

Legal translation competence includes a high number of sub-competences that legal translation trainees need to master. Therefore, trainers may have no time to tackle issues at the very micro level that are challenging not only for legal translation trainees, but sometimes even for professional translators. Although many such issues are identified in legal translation textbooks, the prevailing holistic approach to teaching legal translation may have led to such issues being sidelined in the legal translation classroom. Drawing on the author’s experience as a legal translation trainer, this paper attempts to fill this vacuum and offer a systematic approach to addressing at least some of these phenomena. A selection of tricky terms will be presented, together with practical activities designed to raise trainees’ awareness of such issues and teach them how to approach them confidently when translating from and to English. Four groups of terms are covered: false friends in general and legal language; vague terms such as good and reasonable; non-transparent terms where complex legal meaning is packed into a simple term (constructive, in lieu of), and enantiosemous terms (apparent, qualified). It is believed that when such phenomena are tackled in isolation, trainees may become better equipped to deal with them successfully the next time they encounter them in an English source text or to use them actively when translating into English.

Details

Language :
German, English, Spanish; Castilian, French
ISSN :
09041699 and 19031785
Issue :
64
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Hermes
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7b7a376f6ece4e2783a84d9ff30b87d4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7146/hjlcb.vi64.147310