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Do the Best Let God do the rest
Kamis, 16 Maret 2023
6 Fakta Menarik Bandara Hang Nadim Batam
Sop Tulang Jumbo Lubuk Baja, Sekali Coba Langsung Cinta
Bikin Ketagihan, Hitamnya Kopi O Racikan Para Leluhur Penambah Semangat Kerja
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12 Spot Destinasi Wisata Kota Batam 2023 Worth It BGT
Ajaib!!! Ini 10 Manfaat Air Kelapa Muda Untuk Kesehatan
Selasa, 14 Maret 2023
5 Healthy Reason to Eat Mangoes
Mangoes is very delicious for consumption. Mangoes have a sweet and sour taste. Many people like mangoes for juice and dessert.
Mangoes also have many benefit health for our body such us:
1. Increase imun system
Mango fruit which has a sour taste can be an alternative source of natural vitamin C. This fruit also have other ingredients such as vitamin A and carotenoids in this fruit are also quite a lot.
2. Lose weight
Mangoes good for diet program.The ingredient of mangoes help the body to burn fat.
3. Reduce Collesterol
Mangoes have high content of fiber and vitamin C that effective to lowering bad cholesterol in the body.
4. Prevent Flue
The contenct of vitamin C in Magoes can prevent flue.
5. Maintain Eye Health
Mangoes contains Vitamin A and beta-caroten that good for maintain eye healthSenin, 13 Maret 2023
Kenali 10 Manfaat Pepaya Bagi Kesehatan Tubuh
The Intention of the Text, The Intention of The Translator, Text Style and Readership (PETER NEWMARK)
THE INTENTION OF THE TEXT
In reading, you search for the intention of the text, you cannot isolate this from understanding it, they go together and the title may be remote from the content as well as the intention. Two texts may describe a battle or a riot or a debate, stating the same facts and figures, but the type of ianguageused and even the grammatical structures (passive voice, impersonal verbs often used to disclaim rcsponsibilitv) in each case may be evidence of different points of view. The intention of the text represents the SL writer's attitude to the subject matter.
A piece about floors may be 'pushing1 floor polishes; about newspapers, a condemnation of the press; about nuclear weapons, an advertisement for them -always there is a point of view, somewhere, a modal component to the proposition, perhaps in a word- * unfortunately', 'nevertheless', 'hopefully1,
What is meant by 'That was clever of him1? Is it ironical, openly or implicitly? {In a text showing that BBC Radio 2 is a pale imitation of commercial radio, the irony may only be implicit and obscure to a non-British reader, and the translator may want to make the point more explicitly,) "CUmenie, noire justice repressive?*, writes a journalist meaning LOur repressive judicial system is far from lenient1, or is it a bluff, mainly nonsense, for amusement? It may be 'iceberg1 work to find out, since the tone mav come through in a literal translation, but the translator has to be aware of it, Again, in a detailed, confused piece about check-ups on elderly patients who may have to undergo chemotherapy the author's intention is to show that patients must have a thorough physical check-up before they start a course of drugs: if physical problems are cleared up first, there may be no need for psychiatry.
A summary of this nature, which uses only a few key words from the original, appears to be isolated from the language, simply to show what happens in real life, and it is indispensable to the translator. But he still has to 'return1 to the text. He still has to translate the text, even if he has to simplify, rearrange, clarify, slim it of its redundancies, pare it down.
THE INTENTION OF THE TRANSLATOR
Usually, the translator's intention is identical with that of the author of the SI - text. But he may be translating an advertisement, a notice, or a set of instructions to show his client how such matters are formulated and written in the source language,
THE ANALYSIS OF A TEXT
13
rather than how to adapt them in order to persuade or instruct a new TL reader-ship. And again, he may be translating a manual of instructions for a less educated readership, so thac the explanation in his translation mav be much larger than the 'reproduction'.
TEXT STYLES
Following Nida, we distinguish four types of (literary or non-literary) text:
(1) Narrative: a dynamic sequence of events, where the emphasis is on the verbs or. for English, 'dummy' or 'empty' verbs plus verb-nouns or phrasal verbs ('He made a sudden appearance', lHe burst in1).
(2) Description, which is static, with emphasis on linking verbs, adjectives, adjectival nouns.
(3) Discussion, a treatment of ideas, with emphasis on abstract nouns (concepts), verbs of thought, mental activity ('consider1, 'argue', etc.), logical argument and connectives,
(4) Dialogue, with emphasis on colloquialisms and phaticisms.
THE READERSHIP
On the basis of the variety of language used in the original, you attempt to characterise the readership of the original and then of the translation, and to decide how much attention you have to pay to the TL readers, (In the case of a poem or any work written primarily as self-expression the amount is, I suggest, very little,) You may try to assess the level of education, the class, age and sex of the readership if these are 'marked \
The average text for translation tends to be for an educated, middle-class readership in an informal, not colloquial style. The most common variety of 'marked' error in register among student translators tends to be Colloquial' and 'intimate1, e.g. useofphrasessuchas 'more and more'for'increasingly' (de plus en plus), 'above air for 'particularly' (surwut); 'job' for 'work1; 'got well1 for 'recovered' and excessively familiar phrasal verbs ('get out of, 'get rid of). TrTe other common error, use of formal or official register (e.g. 'decease' for 'death*), also shows signs of translationese. These tokens of language typify the student-translators instead of the readership they are translating for; they may epitomise their degree of knowledge and interest in the subject and the appropriate culture, i.e. how motivated they are. All this will help you to decide on the degree of formality, generality (or specificity) and emotional tone you must express when you work on the text.