You can always translate the ambiguity logically (into any sufficiently “complete” language?), but the increased awkwardness of the translation may have an effect.
You don’t only add awkwardness. You nearly always also add additional meaning or lose meaning.
If you for example want to translate the English “Dear students,” into German you can either say: “Liebe Schüler,”, “Liebe Schüler und Schülerinnen,” or “Liebe Schülerinnen und Schüler,”. In German the words have a gender and if you want to be gender neutral you need both the male and the female form. Then you have to decide which one of those you write first and which one last.
Oh good point! And if you don’t know the context when performing the translation (perhaps it’s an announcement at an all-girls or an all-boys school?), then the translation will be incorrect.
The ambiguity in the original sentence may be impossible to preserve in the translation process, which doesn’t mean that translation is impossible, but it does mean that information must be added by the translator to the sentence that wasn’t present in the original sentence.
Sometimes I do small contract translation jobs as a side activity, but it’s very frustrating when a client sends me snippets of text to be translated without the full context.
You don’t only add awkwardness. You nearly always also add additional meaning or lose meaning.
If you for example want to translate the English “Dear students,” into German you can either say: “Liebe Schüler,”, “Liebe Schüler und Schülerinnen,” or “Liebe Schülerinnen und Schüler,”. In German the words have a gender and if you want to be gender neutral you need both the male and the female form. Then you have to decide which one of those you write first and which one last.
Oh good point! And if you don’t know the context when performing the translation (perhaps it’s an announcement at an all-girls or an all-boys school?), then the translation will be incorrect.
The ambiguity in the original sentence may be impossible to preserve in the translation process, which doesn’t mean that translation is impossible, but it does mean that information must be added by the translator to the sentence that wasn’t present in the original sentence.
Sometimes I do small contract translation jobs as a side activity, but it’s very frustrating when a client sends me snippets of text to be translated without the full context.