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In pursuit of the ‘third code’ Using the ZJU Corpus of Translational Chinese (ZCTC) in Translation Studies. Richard Xiao Lianzhen He Ming Yue. CBTS: A new paradigm. Laviosa (1998a)
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In pursuit of the ‘third code’ Using the ZJU Corpus of Translational Chinese (ZCTC)in Translation Studies Richard Xiao Lianzhen He Ming Yue
CBTS: A new paradigm • Laviosa (1998a) • “the corpus-based approach is evolving, through theoretical elaboration and empirical realisation, into a coherent, composite and rich paradigm that addresses a variety of issues pertaining to theory, description, and the practice of translation.” • Hypotheses that translation universals can be tested by corpus data (Baker 1993, 1995) • Rapid development of corpus linguistics, esp. multilingual corpus research in the early 1990s • Increasing interest in Descriptive Translation Studies (Toury 1995) • Tymoczko (1998) • “Corpus Translation Studies is central to the way that Translation Studies as a discipline will remain vital and move forward.” • Meta 43/4 (1998); Kenny (2001); Laviosa (2002); Granger et al (eds.) (2003); Olohan (2004); Mauranen et al (eds.) (2004); Kruger (ed.) (forthcoming) UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
TU: A focus of CBTS • An important area of corpus-based TS over the past decade • Baker (1993, 1996);Chesterman (2004);Kenny (1998, 1999, 2000, 2001); Laviosa (1998b); Mauranen & Kujamaki 2004); McEnery & Xiao (2002, 2007); Olohan (2004); Olohan & Baker’s (2000); Øverås (1998);Pym (2005); Xiao and Yue (2008) • The Translational English Corpus (TEC) • Manual • http://www.llc.manchester.ac.uk/ctis/research/english-corpus/ • Software • http://ronaldo.cs.tcd.ie/tec/jnlp/ UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Features of translated English • Laviosa (1998b): Four core patterns of lexical use • A relatively low proportion of lexical words over function words • A relatively high proportion of high-frequency words over low-frequency words • A relatively great repetition of the most frequent words • Less variety in most frequently used words UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Features of translated English • Beyond the lexical level • Simplification: simpler than native language lexically / syntactically / stylistically • “the tendency to simplify the language used in translation” (Baker 1996: 181-182) • Normalization: more “normal” than the target native language • the “tendency to exaggerate features of the target language and to conform to its typical patterns” (Baker 1996: 183) • Explicitation: more frequent use of conjunctions, increased cohesion in translated text • the tendency in translations to “spell things out rather than leave them implicit” (Baker 1996: 180) • Sanitization: reduced connotational meaning • translated texts are “somewhat ‘sanitized’ versions of the original” (Kenny 1998: 515) UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
TU: A target of debate • Is translational language different from target native language? • Translational language is at best an unrepresentative special variant of the target language because translations cannot possibly avoid the effect of translationese • e.g. Baker 1993; Gellerstam 1996; Hartmann 1985; Laviosa 1997; McEnery & Wilson 2001; McEnery & Xiao (2002, 2007);Teubert 1996 UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
TU: A target of debate • Are the features uncovered on the basis of translational English generalizable to other translated languages? • Existing evidence has largely come from translational English and related European languages • If such features are to be generalized as “translation universals”, the language pairs involved must not be restricted to English and closely related languages • Cheong’s (2006) study of English-Korean translation contradicts even the least controversial explicitation hypothesis • Evidence from “genetically” distinct language pairs such as English and Chinese is undoubtedly more convincing, if not indispensable UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
The ZCTC corpus • Created with the explicit aim of studying the features of translated Chinese • A translational counterpart of the Lancaster Corpus of Mandarin Chinese (LCMC), a one-million-word balanced corpus of native Chinese (McEnery & Xiao 2004) • www.ling.lancs.ac.uk/corplang/lcmc/ • Five hundred 2,000-word text samples taken proportionally from fifteen written text categories published in China in the 1990s • www.ling.lancs.ac.uk/corplang/ZCTC/ UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
LCMC / ZCTC corpus design UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
ZCTC vs. LCMC UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Corpus markup and annotation • CES-compliant XML • CES: www.cs.vassar.edu/CES/ • Tokenization and POS tagging • ICTCLAS2008: www.ictclas.org • A precision rate of 98.54% for tokenization • Paragraph, sentence, word token • Encoded in Unicode (UTF-8) UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Core patterns of lexical use • Do the core patterns of lexical use Laviosa (1998b) observes in translational English also apply in translated Chinese? • Same criteria and parameters as in Laviosa (1998b) • Lexical density • Frequency profiles • Mean sentence length UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Lexical density • The Stubbs-style lexical density: the ratio between the number of lexical words (i.e. content words) and the total number of words (Stubbs 1986: 33; 1996: 172) • Measure of informational load • Adopted in Laviosa (1998b) • Lexical density measure by TTR or Standardized TTR (Scott 2004) • Measure of lexical variability • Commonly used in Corpus Linguistics UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Stubbs-style lexical density • Mean LD: LCMC (66.93%) vs. ZCTC (61.59%) – the mean difference is statistically significant (t = -4.94, p<0.001) • All 15 genres have a greater lexical density in native than translated Chinese – significant for all genres barring M UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Standardized TTR • LCMC as a whole has a slightly higher STTR than ZCTC (46.58 vs. 45.73) – not significant • The differences in most genres are marginal • Greater STTR scores can be found in both native and translated Chinese genres UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Lexical-function word ratio • The mean ratio between lexical and function words is significantly greater in native Chinese (2.08) than translated Chinese (1.64) (t = -4.88, p<0.001) • Native Chinese has a greater ratio in all genres, and the differences are statistically significantfor all genres barring M (science fiction) • In line with Laviosa’s (1998b) initial hypothesis that translational language has a relatively low proportion of lexical words over function words UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Frequency profiles • Laviosa’s (1998b) ‘list head’ or ‘high frequency words’ • Wordlist items which individually account for at least 0.10% of the total tokens in a corpus • The same criterion for high frequency words in the present study to ensure comparability UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Frequency profiles • The numbers of high frequency words are very similar in the two corpora • High frequency words account for a considerably greater proportion of tokens in the translational corpus • High frequency words display a much greater repetition rate in translational Chinese • The ratio between high- and low-frequency words is also greater in translational corpus UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Mean sentence length vs. simplification • Conflicting observations of mean sentence length as an indicator of simplification (e.g. Laviosa 1998b vs. Malmkjaer 1997) • In our corpora, native Chinese shows a slightly greater mean sentence length (t = - 1.41, p =0.17) • Mean sentence length appears to be more sensitive to genres than being a reliable indicator of native versus translational language UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Lexical use in translational Chinese • Summary • The core lexical features proposed by Laviosa (1998b) for translational English are essentially also applicable in translated Chinese • But mean sentence length is less reliable as an indicator of simplification in translational Chinese UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Connectives: Device for explicitation? • Perhaps the most studied topic in TU research and the least controversial hypothesis • Chen (2006) • Connectives are a device for explicitation in English-Chinese translation of popular science books • Xiao and Yue (2008) • Connectives are significantly more frequent in translated than native Chinese fiction • Question • Can we generalize this finding from specific genres to Mandarin Chinese in general? UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Conjunctions in ZCTC and LCMC • Mean frequency of conjunctions is significantly greater in ZCTC (306.42 instances per 10,000 tokens) than in LCMC (243.23) (LL=723.12 for 1 d.f., p<0.001) • Genres of imaginative writing (K-P, R) generally demonstrate a significantly more frequent use of conjunctions in translational Chinese • Of expository writing, while conjunctions are considerably more frequent in most genres in translated Chinese (e.g. A, H), there are also genres in which conjunctions are more common in native Chinese (e.g. F, J) UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Conjunctions of different frequency bands • More types of conjunctions of high frequency bands (0.10%, 0.05%, and 0.01%) are used in translational corpus • There are an equal number of conjunctions (56 types) with a proportion greater than 0.005% in translational and native corpora • After this balance point, the native corpus displays a greater number of less frequent conjunctions (a usage band of 0.001% and below) • The tendency to use conjunctions more frequently can be taken as a sign of explicitation UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Conjunctions of different styles • A closer comparison of the lists of frequent conjunctions (proportion of 0.001%) in their respective corpus also sheds some new light on the simplification hypothesis • There are 91 and 99 types of frequent conjunctions in the two corpora – 86 items overlap in the two lists • Conjunctions on the ZCTC but not LCMC list are all informal, colloquial, and simple, which usually have more formal alternatives • Conjunctions on the LCMC but not ZCTC list are typically formal and archaic • Evidence for the simplification hypothesis but against the normalization hypothesis UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Conclusions • Laviosa’s (1998b) observations of the core patterns of lexical features of translational English are also applicable in translated Chinese • Beyond the lexical level • Mean sentence length is sensitive to genres and may not be a reliable indicator of simplification • A comparison of frequent connectives in native and translational Chinese appears to suggest that simpler forms tend to be used in translations • In spite of some genre-based subtleties, translational Chinese uses conjunctions more frequently than native Chinese, which provides evidence in favour of the explicitation hypothesis UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Conclusions • We believe that the newly created ZCTC will play a leading role in the study of translational Chinese by producing more empirical evidence • It is our hope that the study of translational Chinese will help to address limitations of imbalance in the current state of translation universal research UCCTS 2008 - Hangzhou
Thank you! Richard.Xiao@edgehill.ac.uk z.xiao@lancaster.ac.uk