I also wanted some German text translated (from Ulrike's 400 Tricks...) several 
years ago.  As it happened, a nice young couple had moved into the house 
next-door to me.  He was German, and she was American, but had studied German 
extensively and had worked as a translator for the American embassy.  What more 
could I ask!?  So I finagled an invitation, took my book next door, and we got 
to work.  

The trouble is, as my translators told me, German is a "impoverished" language 
than English.  They use the same word in many different ways, the meaning of 
which comes to light in the context with other words.  So even though both of 
them knew what the words meant in their own frame of reference, when used in 
the context of lace, they were mystified, because they didn't understand lace.  
So the translation was a matter of me explaining what I could of the process 
being discussed, and they would toss out possible meanings of a word 
encountered until an option made sense to me.  It was not an easy process, and 
was so time-consuming that I was reluctant to ask them to do it again.  The 
best possible option for translation is to find a lacemaker who also knows the 
German language quite well.

So it's not that the on-line translators are inacurate.  It's just that when 
they were set up, there was one meaning assigned to each word, and it does not 
always apply to the context of the text you're trying to translate.  

Clay

-----Original Message-----
From: Barbara Joyce <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Oct 23, 2005 9:36 PM
To: lace Arachne <[email protected]>
Subject: [lace] Online Translators

I did actually run some of the German text through an online translator
before I made my design. The problem is, although the translators can
process the more common words, they're completely lost with anything that's
a lace-related term.

I still don't know what the title means, so I decided to have a little fun.
I used three online translating sites and tried each one with "Gekloppelter
Weihnachtsschmuck."

Here's what I got:

Freetranslation.com: gekloppelter christmas jewelry
Babelfish/Alta Vista: more gekloppelter weihnachtsschmuck
translation2.paralink.com: gekloppelter one Christmas-smart

I rest my case. ;-)

Barbara Joyce
Snoqualmie, WA
USA

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