Vom Thema belegte Seiten: [1 2] > | Poll: In ten years' time, what language other than English will be generating more jobs for translators? Initiator des Themas: ProZ.com Staff
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This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "In ten years' time, what language other than English will be generating more jobs for translators?".
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A forum topic will appear each time a new poll is run. For more information, see: http://proz.com/topic/33629 | | | Manuela Junghans Deutschland Local time: 08:31 Mitglied (2004) Englisch > Deutsch + ...
I wonder whether I`m the only one here who thinks that Brazil, and thus Portuguese, will create considerably more translation work in the future. I´m also glad to read that German is ranked "relatively" high, however, I wouldn´t see why the amount of German work should rise a lot over the next 10 years. Best, Manuela | | | Michael Harris Deutschland Local time: 08:31 Mitglied (2006) Deutsch > Englisch Chinese followed by Indian | Jul 28, 2009 |
Would also say after reading the question a second time
[Edited at 2009-07-28 19:03 GMT] | | |
....if we take into account population growth and market growth... | |
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Hindi..and the indic languages | Jul 28, 2009 |
Looking at the stable economic trends of India in such times with a continuing upturn of the GDP, a well managed stock market situation with quite some safety nets in place and a positive looking inflation scenario, I am surprised to see the ratings that Hindi has had in this poll. I feel India is not just represented by Hindi but all the indic languages put together. | | | Wil Hardman (X) Vereinigtes Königreich Local time: 07:31 Spanisch > Englisch + ... China closely followed by India | Jul 28, 2009 |
Looking at the way the world is developing economically and in terms of population then my guess is that the above two countries will be the most prominent. However as Umang mentioned India is not represented by one language alone, nor is China... | | | Niraja Nanjundan (X) Local time: 12:01 Deutsch > Englisch Indian languages will be very important | Jul 28, 2009 |
Umang Dholabhai wrote: I am surprised to see the ratings that Hindi has had in this poll. I feel India is not just represented by Hindi but all the indic languages put together. Yes, Umang, I agree with you. There is also an increasing interest in translation from European languages into Indian languages and vice-versa. I attended a translation conference in Delhi in April, and representatives from the Instituto Cervantes (Spanish) and the French Cultural Centre (run by the French government) spoke there and mentioned that both the Spanish and French governments are providing funds for translation in this area. The representative from France mentioned French to Malayalam and vice-versa as an example, and said that the only problem was that there weren't enough translators in these language pairs. What a pity! | | | Reed James Chile Local time: 02:31 Mitglied (2005) Spanisch > Englisch Two observations | Jul 28, 2009 |
Ten years is a very short time to measure a change of this nature. We are talking about two and a half U.S. presidential terms, two and a half generations of university undergraduates. The English language took centuries to take root, first spread by the Queen's emissaries and later by U.S. capitalism and then swept up by the momentum of globalization. I really think we need to measure this phenomenon in centuries, not decades. The other point I feel I should make is that languages,... See more Ten years is a very short time to measure a change of this nature. We are talking about two and a half U.S. presidential terms, two and a half generations of university undergraduates. The English language took centuries to take root, first spread by the Queen's emissaries and later by U.S. capitalism and then swept up by the momentum of globalization. I really think we need to measure this phenomenon in centuries, not decades. The other point I feel I should make is that languages, cultures and economies are not spread by mere numbers. Look at how small some of the mightiest colonial powers are. Spain is tiny compared to the size of Latin America and the Philipines. Yet Cortez and Pizarro conquered the Mayas and Incas and the Spanish language has permeated these territories ever since. Indeed, ideas outstrip populations. ▲ Collapse | |
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Mark Thompson Brasilien Local time: 03:31 Mitglied Portugiesisch > Englisch
I agree with Manuela - I believe (and hope) that Brazil will enjoy a period of sustained economic growth and increased foreign investment over the next ten years, boosted by the 2014 world cup. I've already seen this development first-hand over the last six years - the demand for translation has increased significantly after Brazil's trade agreements with China and international involvement focused on petroleum, biofuels and industry in general. | | |
Reed D James wrote: Ten years is a very short time to measure a change of this nature. We are talking about two and a half U.S. presidential terms, two and a half generations of university undergraduates. The English language took centuries to take root, first spread by the Queen's emissaries and later by U.S. capitalism and then swept up by the momentum of globalization. I really think we need to measure this phenomenon in centuries, not decades. The other point I feel I should make is that languages, cultures and economies are not spread by mere numbers. Look at how small some of the mightiest colonial powers are. Spain is tiny compared to the size of Latin America and the Philipines. Yet Cortez and Pizarro conquered the Mayas and Incas and the Spanish language has permeated these territories ever since. Indeed, ideas outstrip populations. This is 21st Century. The World is moving fast, very fast, faster then some of us can imagine... Sorry Mr James, but... yeah, I'm sorry... | | | Portuguese Brazil | Jul 28, 2009 |
Manuela and Mark - You bet!!! | | | Anne Bohy Frankreich Local time: 08:31 Englisch > Französisch I took the first step, I am learning Chinese | Jul 28, 2009 |
Well, just for fun... I will be over 70 then, and certainly not fluent enough to translate from Chinese. But I find this language and this culture really fascinating. | |
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B D Finch Frankreich Local time: 08:31 Französisch > Englisch + ... How do languages spread? | Jul 28, 2009 |
Reed D James wrote: The English language took centuries to take root, first spread by the Queen's emissaries and later by U.S. capitalism and then swept up by the momentum of globalization. Quite apart from the fact that most British monarchs have been kings and that, unless you have a particular queen in mind, they aren't capitalised (what a dreadful pun), what do you mean by "emissaries"? Perhaps Her Britannic Majesty, Queen Victoria's emissary to the Australian aborigines and King George's emissary to the Sioux nation graciously persuaded them, over a few bottles of Scotch (in nostalgic memory how the Scots generously chose English over Gaelic), of the merits of the English language over their own languages? I think not. The English language was spread through the barrel of a gun - well, rather a lot of guns, not to mention infected blankets and other such weapons that spread British capitalism which is how Americans (the majority of whose ancestry was not English speaking), came to speak English rather than Native American languages, German, French or Spanish... US capitalism and globalisation have used both military and economic imperialism to spread the English word. These things do happen quicker nowdays; so yes, decades rather than centuries. Reed D James wrote: The other point I feel I should make is that languages, cultures and economies are not spread by mere numbers. Look at how small some of the mightiest colonial powers are. Spain is tiny compared to the size of Latin America and the Philipines. Yet Cortez and Pizarro conquered the Mayas and Incas and the Spanish language has permeated these territories ever since. Indeed, ideas outstrip populations. No, the Spanish didn't win the linguistic argument by the superiority of their ideas either. The motor of linguistic change is military and economic. I just hope that the spread of Chinese as an heir to English (as English was heir to Latin and who speaks that now?) occurs through economic rather than military persuasion. Of course, mass culture is also a motor of linguistic change, but there are good economic reasons for the domination of English in e.g. the film industry and, for reasons I fail to grasp, the French seem to prefer their films dubbed rather than sub-titled. I prefer to hear the dialogue in Chinese when watching a (sub-titled) Chinese film. | | | Parrot Spanien Local time: 08:31 Spanisch > Englisch + ... I'm a don't know | Jul 28, 2009 |
There's more than demographics at play here. You can have as many people speaking a language as you want but if they are subject to certain restrictions, for instance, in trade or movement, it's an uphill struggle. Conversely, the number of speakers is no guarantee of the direction of discourse. What are the chances that these numbers will be speaking more? | | | Miet Ooms Belgien Local time: 08:31 Deutsch > Niederländisch + ... I don't know | Jul 29, 2009 |
but as a translator of German, I hope German of course! | | | Vom Thema belegte Seiten: [1 2] > | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Poll: In ten years' time, what language other than English will be generating more jobs for translators? CafeTran Espresso | You've never met a CAT tool this clever!
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