Real-Time Translation
These two diplomats are about to begin a negotiation. This one is from an unspecified spanish-speaking country hola, and this one is from an unspecified english-speaking country, hello, and these are real interpreters and I’m Barry slaughter, Olsen, a conference interpreter with 25 years of experience, interpreting for diplomats and world leaders at places.
Like the UN, when you think of interpreters, scenes like these are probably the first that come to mind. People in soundproof booths, interpreting in real-time to government officials below, but interpreters often have to do their jobs in private closed-door meetings.
This is called bilateral interpreting and, as anyone who heard about the Trump Putin meetings knows it’s, a very real situation when certain meetings just have a limited number of people in a room and those people are sworn to secrecy.
This is a demonstration of what can typically happen in these meetings behind closed doors. Going someone’s. Actually, things began before anyone even arrived. Most of the time terms are agreed upon in advance of the meeting.
The agendas are carefully negotiated and outline they can range from arms reduction to economic cooperation to water rights. All we need is a plausible topic to get started. Let’s, say dolphin-safe tuna fishing.
To start our interpreters position themselves. You’d. Think they’d, be in the middle somewhere because they’ve got a here. Will right well for meetings in front of the press? They don’t want to be the center of attention or appear in press photos, see how they’re on the sidelines here that’s, so they can easily be cropped out of the pictures to be published later, which Doesn’t, always work out so before this meeting begins.
There are things that need to be decided. Will recordings be permitted? Is a record being kept? Who’s going to attend? But this is a closed-door bilateral meeting, so it’ll just be these four now there are two styles of interpretation.
Simultaneous and consecutive consecutive is the most common style of interpreting in diplomatic situations. Here’s an example: it’s been awhile, since I’ve been here, I’m, so excited to be back. Thank you for having me and then again, Pokeno venía, SEK moti, Samaras oppressive in Manoa meant a the interpreter waits until the speaker.
Pauses time on weird, I see a poetical award, I don’t know I mean no suffice and then interprets. We’re very happy to be able to collaborate again with the government of your country, simple right. But what happens if the speaker goes on and on without pausing, hey come on? We’re die seals, their political award contest interpreters.
Rarely translate word for word. Instead, we remember specific ideas and translate those ideas accordingly, but when the speaker goes on and on for a long time, interpreters rely on note-taking. We want to authorize the use of the dolphin friendly label by your country’s tuna processors.
These symbols represent the speaker’s ideas, but each interpreter has their own style watch as three different interpreters take notes on the same sentence. We want to authorize the use of the dolphin friendly label by your country’s, tuna processors, but we must have a reliable way to verify the use of authorized equipment and fishing practices.
Interpreters usually come up with the symbols beforehand and, as you can see here, on Caddy’s cheat sheets. She carefully thought about what will be most useful for this particular meaning. The DFL stands for dolphin friendly label that tu in a box refers to tuna.
That’s being caught. You get the idea. Now let’s. Watch as caddy interprets her own notes into Spanish GMOs, dr. Lesage ellos son and a lady kita, the dolphin friendly para lo, processor, horas de pekka de soup is pero necesitamos, para verificar, kitten, odorless and o aqui pose it technically Pecola koalas.
Now let’s switch to simultaneous interpretation. Simultaneous interpretation is usually used with earpieces and microphones and with interpreters working from a soundproof booth, but we won ‘ T have equipment in this demonstration when we’re right next to another person like in this scenario.
We can employ what we call shushil, which means whispering in French. This usually is an ideal whispering for a long time is bad for the vocal cords. It can also be hard to hear due to ambient noise in the room like ventilation.
Now let’s, talk about pacing in simultaneous interpretation. You try to maintain an optimal distance from the original speaker. This is referred to as Nicholas or ear voice spam. We’ll call it Evi. So when one diplomat starts speaking, the person employing shushil Taaj would probably start here understand perfectly references in the conceived inif.
The speaker is speaking at 100 to 110 words per minute, which research tells us is the optimal speed for interpreting. The interpreter still has to figure out the optimal eds here’s, the problem, the further back in the diplomat speech.
The interpreter is consuming orestes y es y por ESO, también queremos references, the more the interpreter has to keep in their short-term memory. Their listening and processing as they’re interpreting it’s.
A lot is high quality dolphin dolphin, but get too close to the original speakers words and they may screw up things like grammar, syntax and style, and, of course, interpreters are prone to fatigue and burnout fatigue will hit at around 30 minutes of straight interpreting.
This is why simultaneous interpreters often switch out in intervals of 30 minutes or less. If pushed to our limits, interpreters can really suffer. You may recall the 2009 incident in which more Marga da fees interpreter collapsed at the UN after simultaneously interpreting for over 75 minutes.
So what happens if the conversation turns emotional or the speaker becomes rude? Well, my friend I’ve, listened to what you have to say, and the only conclusion I can come up with is that you’re. A damn fool.
Interpreters are not meant to be mediators; our only job is to stay true to the message of the speaker. If someone becomes rude or angry, if threats are made, then we’re supposed to interpret those threats faithfully.
So in this situation interpreter would not say no conclusion: a la cual, puedo llegar es que attention. Puckateeto imprudent a and here is an example of a faithful interpretation, young Christian aleck.
Well. Well, you got a key okay. That is perfect idiota, although a speaker may become emotional and just stick you late, the interpreter is not going to parrot the behavior of the speaker. This is not the way the people my boy has said to me given to get moja migos.
How could you do this to me? I thought we were friends. This is more realistic. Robo-Moe me voy, a hacer esto me your pencil, Karamoja migos. How could you do this to me? I thought we were friends, so the situation has gotten quite intense.
Maybe a joke. Would be helpful to lighten the mood, but jokes are some of the most difficult things to interpret because they can get lost in translation easily what it one dolphin say to the other after splashing him.
You did that on purpose, never mind that this joke barely makes sense in English. In Spanish it completely doesn’t work because porpoise is Maricopa and purpose is propósito. Al otro, tipo del piccolo – oh, that is so Louise in similar sopa, untranslatable pun, Nintendo.
Attempts at humor are often lost and there’s, not much an interpreter can do there’s, an anecdote about an interpreter who, when faced with an untranslatable joke, simply said colleague, acabo a contouring chief.
Take a result. The totalement intro simplistically a support for, of course, what we’ve seen today, is a tiny excerpt of what are often longer and arduous negotiations, and that concludes our bilateral meeting behind closed doors.
This job is tough to juggle the many things that we have to do to be able to interpret well and accurately, but this job is important because it’s. What makes communication possible between countries and between peoples I’ve, been at it for 25 years, and I wouldn’t trade.
It for the world very will interpret a financial speech. We have seen that the GDP of Latin America and the Caribbean has increased, and then Cathy will interpret a text message exchange between two friends I mean if you’re, seen killing Eve.
I mean it’s, not that realistic, but I love it. Are you kidding? I’ve, never seen it.
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