Comments on Nigel Wiseman's A Practical Dictionary of Chinese Medicine (Ⅰ)--On the "Word-for-word" Literal Approach to Translation
- Author:
Zhu-Fan XIE
1
;
Paul WHITE
Author Information
1. 北京大学附属第一临床医学院
- Keywords:
Nigel Wiseman;
A Practical Dictionary of Chinese Medicine;
English terminology of Chinese medicine;
translation method;
word-for-word literal translation
- From:
Chinese journal of integrative medicine
2005;11(4):305-308
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Comments were made on the "word-for-word" literal translation method used by Mr. Nigel Wiseman in A Practical Dictionary of Chinese Medicine. He believes that only literal translation can reflect Chinese medical concepts accurately. The so-called "word-for-word" translation is actually "English-wordfor- Chinese-character" translation. First, the authors of the dictionary made a list of Single Characters with English Equivalents, and then they gave each character of the medical term an English equivalent according to the list. Finally, they made some minor modifications to make the rendering grammatically smoother. Many English terms thus produced are confusing. The defect of the word-for-word literal translation stems from the erroneous idea that a single character constitutes the basic element of meaning corresponding to the notion of "word" in English, and the meaning of a disyllabic or polysyllabic Chinese word is the simple addition of the constituent characters. Another big mistake is the negligence of the polysemy of Chinese characters. One or two English equivalents can by no means cover all the various meanings of a single character which is a polysemous monosyllabic word. Various examples were cited from this dictionary to illustrate the mistakes.