5 resultados para Bilingual lexicography
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Following the internationalization of contemporary higher education, academic institutions based in non-English speaking countries are increasingly urged to produce contents in English to address international prospective students and personnel, as well as to increase their attractiveness. The demand for English translations in the institutional academic domain is consequently increasing at a rate exceeding the capacity of the translation profession. Resources for assisting non-native authors and translators in the production of appropriate texts in L2 are therefore required in order to help academic institutions and professionals streamline their translation workload. Some of these resources include: (i) parallel corpora to train machine translation systems and multilingual authoring tools; and (ii) translation memories for computer-aided tools. The purpose of this study is to create and evaluate reference resources like the ones mentioned in (i) and (ii) through the automatic sentence alignment of a large set of Italian and English as a Lingua Franca (ELF) institutional academic texts given as equivalent but not necessarily parallel (i.e. translated). In this framework, a set of aligning algorithms and alignment tools is examined in order to identify the most profitable one(s) in terms of accuracy and time- and cost-effectiveness. In order to determine the text pairs to align, a sample is selected according to document length similarity (characters) and subsequently evaluated in terms of extent of noisiness/parallelism, alignment accuracy and content leverageability. The results of these analyses serve as the basis for the creation of an aligned bilingual corpus of academic course descriptions, which is eventually used to create a translation memory in TMX format.
Resumo:
This dissertation is part of the Language Toolkit project which is a collaboration between the School of Foreign Languages and Literature, Interpreting and Translation of the University of Bologna, Forlì campus, and the Chamber of Commerce of Forlì-Cesena. This project aims to create an exchange between translation students and companies who want to pursue a process of internationalization. The purpose of this dissertation is demonstrating the benefits that translation systems can bring to businesses. In particular, it consists of the translation into English of documents supplied by the Italian company Technologica S.r.l. and the creation of linguistic resources that can be integrated into computer-assisted translation (CAT) software, in order to optimize the translation process. The latter is claimed to be a priority with respect to the actual translation products (the target texts), since the analysis conducted on the source texts highlighted that the company could streamline and optimize its English language communication thanks to the use of open source CAT tools such as OmegaT. The work consists of five chapters. The first introduces the Language Toolkit project, the company (Technologica S.r.l ) and its products. The second chapter provides some considerations about technical translation, its features and some misconceptions about it. The difference between technical translation and scientific translation is then clarified and an overview is offered of translation aids such as those used for computer-assisted translation, machine translation, termbases and translation memories. The third chapter contains the analysis of the texts commissioned by Technologica S.r.l. and their categorization. The fourth chapter describes the translation process, with particular attention to terminology extraction and the creation of a bilingual glossary based on a specialized corpus. The glossary was integrated into the OmegaT software in order to facilitate the translation process both for the present task and for future applications. The memory deriving from the translation represents a sort of hybrid resource between a translation memory and a glossary. This was found to be the most appropriate format, given the specific nature of the texts to be translated. Finally, in chapter five conclusions are offered about the importance of language training within a company environment, the potentialities of translation aids and the benefits that they would bring to a company wishing to internationalize itself.
Resumo:
The aim of this work is to develop a prototype of an e-learning environment that can foster Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) for students enrolled in an aircraft maintenance training program, which allows them to obtain a license valid in all EU member states. Background research is conducted to retrace the evolution of the field of educational technology, analyzing different learning theories – behaviorism, cognitivism, and (socio-)constructivism – and reflecting on how technology and its use in educational contexts has changed over time. Particular attention is given to technologies that have been used and proved effective in Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL). Based on the background research and on students’ learning objectives, i.e. learning highly specialized contents and aeronautical technical English, a bilingual approach is chosen, three main tools are identified – a hypertextbook, an exercise creation activity, and a discussion forum – and the learning management system Moodle is chosen as delivery medium. The hypertextbook is based on the technical textbook written in English students already use. In order to foster text comprehension, the hypertextbook is enriched by hyperlinks and tooltips. Hyperlinks redirect students to webpages containing additional information both in English and in Italian, while tooltips show Italian equivalents of English technical terms. The exercise creation activity and the discussion forum foster interaction and collaboration among students, according to socio-constructivist principles. In the exercise creation activity, students collaboratively create a workbook, which allow them to deeply analyze and master the contents of the hypertextbook and at the same time create a learning tool that can help them, as well as future students, to enhance learning. In the discussion forum students can discuss their individual issues, content-related, English-related or e-learning environment-related, helping one other and offering instructors suggestions on how to improve both the hypertextbook and the workbook based on their needs.
Resumo:
L'obiettivo della tesi è la compilazione del glossario culinario italiano-russo che “racchiudere” termini culinari artusiani e propone una versione russa basandosi anche sulla traduzione parziale del libro in lingua russa. La tesi si divide in sette parti: introduzione, capitoli primo, secondo, terzo e quarto, conclusione e bibliografia. Il primo capitolo introduce la figura di Pellegrino Artusi con brevi cenni sulla sua vita e tratteggia, altresì, le peripezie ed il successo internazionale della sua opera ed il suo approdo in Russia. Il secondo capitolo è dedicato alla ricerca terminologica e alle fasi propedeutiche alla creazione del glossario. Inoltre, vengono spiegate le risorse usate per la creazione dei corpora. Avendo a disposizione la traduzione parziale de “La scienza in cucina e l'arte di mangiar bene” in russo (traduzione di I. Alekberova) fornita dalla Casa Artusi, si cerca di spiegare la scelta dei termini italiani messi a confronto con quelli esistenti nella traduzione russa. Il terzo capitolo introduce il glossario stesso preceduto da una breve spiegazione. Ogni “entrata” contiene il termine, la sua categoria grammaticale e la sua definizione in entrambe le lingue, seguita nella maggior parte dei casi dalle collocazioni o dagli esempi d'uso oppure dai sinonimi. Il quarto capitolo presenta commenti alla compilazione del glossario. Qui vengono analizzati i problemi riscontrati durante la fase compilativa, si presentano le soluzioni trovate e si forniscono esempi concreti. Ci sono anche commenti alle voci non presenti nel glossario. Infine, vi è una breve conclusione del percorso affrontato seguita dalla bibliografia e dalla sitografia. ENGLISH The purpose of this dissertation is to present a bilingual Italian-Russian glossary based on the culinary terms drawn from Artusi's cooking book "The Science of Cooking and the Art of Fine dining". The dissertation consists of an introduction, 4 chapters, conclusions and a list of bibliography. An introduction presents an overview of the entire dissertation. The first chapter includes a presentation of Pellegrino Artusi, brief introduction to his life, his book and the success it has had around the world and mainly in Russia. The second chapter focuses on the creation and use of comparable and parallel corpora that have been created ad hoc for the purpose of the glossary. It also describes the different programs that have been used in order to select the terminology. The third chapter presents the structure of the bilingual culinary glossary followed by the glossary itself. Each entry contains the term, its gramatical category and the definition in both languages followed by, in most but not all cases, collocation, synonyms and additional notes. The fourth chapter presents an analysis of the compilation of the glossary combined with comments and examples. This chapter is followed by final conclusions of the present dissertation. The last part contains a bibliography that includes all the resources that have been used for the completion of this dissertation followed by the webliography.
Resumo:
This dissertation is divided into four chapters and combines the study of the European Green Capital Award with a terminology research on small wind turbines, a technical subject in the macro-area of sustainable cities. Chapter I aims at giving an overview of the development of environmental policies and treaties both at the international and European level. Then, after highlighting the crucial role of cities for the global environment, the chapter outlines the urban dimension of the EU environmental policies and defines the vision of a sustainable city promoted by the European Union. Chapter II contains an in-depth analysis of the European Green Capital Award and illustrates its aims, the entire designation process, its communication campaign and its evolution. Chapter III focuses on applicant, finalist and winning cities in order to study the aspect of participation in the competition. It also contains a detailed analysis of two European Green Capitals, i.e. Nantes and Bristol, who respectively won the title in 2013 and 2015. Based on a variety of sources, this chapter examines the successful aspects of their bids and communication campaigns during their year as Green Capitals. Chapter IV presents the terminology research in the field of small wind turbines and the resulting bilingual glossary in English and Italian. The research was carried out using two terminology tools: TranslatorBank and InterpretBank. The former is composed by two software programmes, CorpusCreator and MiniConcordancer DB, which were used to semi-automatically create specialized corpora from the Web and then extract terminology and occurrences of terms from the collected texts. The latter is a software which has been specifically designed for interpreters in order to help them optimize their professional workflow, from gathering information and creating glossaries on a specific subject to the actual interpreting task at a conference. InterpretBank’s tool TermMode was used to create a glossary with term equivalents and additional information such as definitions and the contexts of use.