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Why is it so hard to translate Chinese menus?

Bad translations from Chinese menus into western languages are a mainstay of translator humour. It just seems to be almost impossibly difficult to accurately translate the names of many delicious Chinese dishes.

The various cuisines of China are among the finest in the world. In general, China has an extremely complex culture of gastronomy, Chinese creativity is applied to the names of dishes, and many culinary terms in Chinese simply don’t have direct correlates in other languages. In English, the word ‘dumpling’, for example, is used for many Chinese dishes, all of which are unlike the dumplings that feature in western European cooking.

Perhaps a bigger question is why people feel the need to translate from Chinese at all. It makes sense to transliterate into the Roman alphabet, as otherwise non-Chinese people wouldn’t be able to read the menu – but if we are happy to adopt words like pizza and spaghetti and bouillabaisse and crumble from and into many languages, why do we need literal translations of the names of Chinese dishes?

Perhaps, as Chinese cuisine is ever-more integrated into menus outside China, these hilariously bad menu translations will become outdated, as a growing number of Chinese dishes will simply become part of our global diet.

Photo Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/steamed-dumplings-on-steamer-q66grqqHpDQ

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Talking To Your Dog

Dog-owners often talk to their dogs in a particular style that’s very similar to how caregivers talk to babies, which is known by researchers as ‘child-directed speech’. ‘Dog-directed speech,’ which also involves speaking more slowly, in a higher-pitched voice, with a simple vocabulary, is sometimes referred to as ‘Doggerel.’ 

A team of researchers at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, Hungary measured the brain activity of family dogs as they listened to dog-directed speech, child-directed speech, and ordinary adult conversational tones. It emerged that their brains were much more responsive to dog- and child-directed speech than to the ordinary adult tones, and also that they were more responsive to women’s voices than men’s, perhaps because women’s voices tend naturally to be higher and more melodic. 

If you’re a dog-lover, whatever language you use to address your beloved pet, there’s no need to feel silly if you do so using a version of baby-talk. Science is on your side!

Photo Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/grayscale-photo-of-person-and-dog-holding-hands-cbIKeuURaq8?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash

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Surnames of Foundlings in Italy

Surnames have all sorts of origins. Often they are associated with a particular place, or with a particular trade. For example, an English-speaker whose surname is ‘Cooper’ can reasonably assume that one of their ancestors worked in the barrel-making business.

In Italy, some of the most intriguing, and saddest, origin stories for surnames are associated with that country’s long history of caring for abandoned newborn infants. Italian civil records contain many examples of children for whom little background information is available because they were abandoned at or shortly after birth. Many were born out of wedlock to young, poor, unmarried mothers, who chose to leave them at a ruota dei proietti or ‘foundling wheel’ that allowed them to discreetly deposit an infant at a suitable establishment. 

Having no knowledge of who the babies’ families were, the authorities often gave them surnames such as ‘Esposito’, which means ‘exposed’ or ‘abandoned,’ ‘Innocenti’, which means ‘innocent one’ or ‘Trovato,’ which means ‘found’. Many of these surnames are still relatively common today, and anyone bearing one is likely to have an ancestor whose life started out in a foundling hospital.

Photo Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/people-sitting-at-a-table-k0SMpuGKSFE?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash

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How Many Words for Colours?

One of the team-members of 101translations recently witnessed a crime taking place and had to give a police statement. Trying to be as helpful and specific as possible, she described the assailant as having mauve trousers and a cerise top. The male police officer looked baffled, so his female colleague leaned in to explain: ‘That’s purple and red, Bob.’

Since the first research on the topic was carried out in the 1970s, investigations consistently show that women, statistically speaking, tend to have much larger vocabularies for colour than men, and that this trend hasn’t changed much despite the dramatic social shifts that have taken place in many societies since then. 

So what’s the reason for the difference?

Women in many cultures and linguistic contexts still get to choose clothes from a much wider colour palette than men so that’s probably one of the reasons, if not the main one. But research suggests that some men are also reluctant to learn more words for colours, or to use them if they know them, because of ongoing negative stereotyping of men who are seen as being interested in ‘women’s topics.’ Research also suggests that women tend to be better at discerning assorted colours and shades, although it’s not clear whether this is an innate tendency, or a learned behaviour from simply being exposed to more colour choices in their daily lives. 

The topic of sex differences in language use is a fascinating one – and a tricky area to explore, as it is often next to impossible to figure out the driving factors for the differences, which can also shift as cultural mores do.

Photo Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/blue-white-green-and-red-textile-XWDMmk-yW7Q?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash

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Hip Hop and Language

Hip hop first emerged as a distinct musical genre in New York in the 1970s, when local Black artists started to perform the distinctive rhythmic music with its spoken lyrics and syncopation. It has gone on to have a profound effect not just on popular music in general, but also on how people speak across the English-speaking world, and to some extent even beyond. 

Black Americans often speak with accents, dialects and vocabularies that are different to those of white people living in the same areas. Differences can be especially marked when it comes to spoken informal language. The predominantly Black artists working in hip hop dipped into the rich lexicon of Black American vernacular. In the process, they introduced words into the general English vocabulary. Without realising it, you’ve almost certainly used some of these words yourself. 

For example, the term to ‘ghost’ someone, meaning to disappear from their life suddenly, without warning, comes from the Black American vernacular, and was first heard in a forum more accessible to the mainstream on a 1991 collaboration between two hip-hop duos, 3rd Bass and Nice & Smooth. 

Photo Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/man-in-red-jacket-holding-black-dj-controller-qQzw8jPvip8?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash

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Origins of the Spanish ‘Lisp’

Folklore is everywhere, and linguistics is no exception. 

You might have heard the old story about how the Spanish ‘lisp’ – whereby the letter z, the sibilant c and the letter s are pronounced as ‘th’ as in English – originated because King Ferdinand of Spain (1479-1516) spoke with a lisp, and ordinary people adopted this way of talking out of deference to him. This tale is sometimes cited as the reason why Latin Americans don’t pronounce Spanish the same way. 

In fact, the Spanish ‘lisp’, known as ‘ceceo’ in Spain, was originally a local pronunciation from specific parts of Spain. Most of the original Spanish conquerors and settlers of what we now know as Latin America were from a different area – and in any case, accents and pronunciations have changed over the centuries on both sides of the Atlantic. 

With its varied pronunciations and distinctive local accents and vocabularies, Spanish is one of the most widely-spoken languages in the world. The diverse types of Spanish are generally mutually intelligible, but there can be considerable variation in vocabulary, with differences due to contact with a wide variety of Indigenous peoples and languages, and to the vicissitudes of history.

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Swedish Chef

The Swedish Chef is one of the most beloved characters of The Muppet Show, known for his interesting approach to cooking, for communicating in mock Swedish, and for his trademark phrase, ‘Bork, bork, bork!’

Perhaps predictably, the Swedish Chef’s performance is less beloved in Sweden than elsewhere. Most Swedes feel that his language sounds much more like Norwegian and that there’s nothing very Swedish about his behaviour at all. And in Germany, the Swedish Chef becomes the Danish Chef, because the way Danes speak German reminded the voice-over actor of the melodic gibberish of the original character.

Photo Source: https://www.foodandwine.com/lifestyle/7-kitchen-and-life-lessons-that-the-swedish-chef-taught-us