Orthographic transcription

Orthographic transcription is a transcription method that employs the standard spelling system of each target language.[1][2]

Examples of orthographic transcription are "Pushkin" and "Pouchkine", respectively the English and French orthographic transcriptions of the surname "Пу́шкин" in the name Алекса́ндр Пу́шкин (Alexander Pushkin). Thus, each target language (English and French) transcribes the surname according to its own orthography.[2]

Contrast with phonetic transcription, phonemic orthography, transliteration, and translation.

Distinction from transliteration

Transcription as a mapping from sound to script must be distinguished from transliteration, which creates a mapping from one script to another that is designed to match the original script as directly as possible. Standard transcription schemes for linguistic purposes include the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), and its ASCII equivalent, SAMPA. See also phonetic transcription. Transcription is often confused with transliteration, perhaps due to a common journalistic practice of mixing elements of both in rendering foreign names. The resulting practical transcription is a hybrid that is called both "transcription" and "transliteration" by the general public.

The table below shows examples of phonetic transcription of the name of the former Russian president known in English as Boris Yeltsin, followed by accepted hybrid forms in various languages. English speakers will pronounce "Boris" differently from the original Russian, so it is a transliteration rather than a transcription in the strict sense.

The same words are likely to be transcribed differently under different systems. For example, the Mandarin Chinese name for the capital of the People's Republic of China is Beijing using the commonly used contemporary system Hanyu Pinyin, but in the historically significant Wade Giles system, it is written Pei-Ching.

Practical transcription can be done into a non-alphabetic language too. For example, in a Hong Kong newspaper, George Bush's name is transliterated into two Chinese characters that sound like "Bou-sū" (布殊) by using the characters that mean "cloth" and "special". Similarly, many words from English and other Western European languages are borrowed in Japanese and are transcribed using Katakana, one of the Japanese syllabaries.

Subsequent divergence

After transcribing a word from one language to the script of another language:

This is especially evident for Greek loanwords and proper names. Greek words were historically first transcribed to Latin (according to their old pronunciations), and then loaned into other languages, and finally the loanword has developed according to the rules of the target language. For example, Aristotle is the currently used English form of the name of the philosopher whose name in Greek is spelled  ̓Aριστoτέλης (Aristotélēs), which was transcribed to Latin Aristoteles, from where it was loaned into other languages and followed their linguistic development. (In "classical" Greek of Aristotle's time, lower-case letters were not used, and the name was spelled ΑΡΙΣΤΟΤΕΛΗΣ.)

Pliocene, a much more recent word, comes from the Greek words πλείων (pleiôn, "more") and καινóς (kainós, "new"), which were first transcribed (Latinised) to plion and caenus and then loaned into other languages. (<κ> became <c> because there was no <k> in Latin.)

When this process continues over several languages, it may fail miserably to convey the original pronunciation. One ancient example is the Sanskrit word dhyāna ("contemplation", "meditation") which was transcribed into the Chinese word ch'anna through Buddhist scriptures; next shortened into ch'an. Ch'an (禪), pronounced zen in Japanese, used as the name of the Buddhist sect of "Chan" (Zen Buddhism), was transcribed from Japanese (ゼン zen) to zen in English. Dhyāna to zen is quite a change.

Another issue is any subsequent change in "preferred" transcription. For instance, the word describing a philosophy or religion in China was popularized in English as Tao and given the termination -ism to produce an English word Taoism. That transcription reflects the Wade-Giles system. More recent Pinyin transliterations produce Dao and Daoism. (See also Daoism-Taoism Romanization issue.)

Transcription and transliteration examples

Original Russian text Борис Николаевич Ельцин
Official transliteration ISO 9 (GOST 7.79-2000) Boris Nikolaevič Elʹcin
Scholarly transliteration Boris Nikolaevič Elʼcin
IPA phonetic transcription [bʌˈɾʲis nʲɪkʌˈɫajɪvʲɪt͡ʃʲ ˈjelʲt͡sɨn]
Examples of the same name rendered in other orthographic systems (sorted by language families)
Bulgarian / Macedonian Борис Николаевич Елцин
Serbian Борис Николајевич Јељцин + Boris Nikolajevič Jeljcin
Croatian Boris Nikolajevič Jeljcin
Slovene / Czech Boris Nikolajevič Jelcin
Slovak Boris Nikolajevič Jeľcin
Polish Borys Nikołajewicz Jelcyn
Latvian Boriss Nikolajevičs Jeļcins
Lithuanian Boris Nikolajevič Jelcin (Lithuanian form: Borisas Nikolajevičius Jelcinas)
English Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin
German Boris Nikolajewitsch Jelzin
Dutch / Norwegian Boris Nikolajevitsj Jeltsin
Swedish / Danish Boris Nikolajevitj Jeltsin
Spanish Borís Nikoláyevich Yeltsin
Filipino Boris Nikoláyevits Yeltsin
Portuguese Boris Nicoláievitch Iéltsin
Catalan Borís Nikolàievitx Ieltsin
French Boris Nikolaïevitch Ieltsine
Albanian Boris Nikollajeviç Jellcin
Armenian Բորիս Նիկոլաևիչ Ելցին
Mahl ބޮރިސް ނިކޮލަޔެވިޗް ޔެލްސިން
Hungarian Borisz Nyikolajevics Jelcin
Finnish Boris Nikolajevitš Jeltsin
Estonian Boriss Nikolajevitš Jeltsin
Turkish Boris Nikolayeviç Yeltsin
Arabic بوريس نيكولايفتش يلتسن (approx. translit. būrīs nīkūlāyafitsh yīltsin)
Hebrew בוריס ניקולאיביץ' ילצין (approx. translit. bwrjs njḳwlʾjbjṣ' jlṣjn)
Chinese (Mandarin) 鲍里斯·尼古拉耶维奇·叶利钦 + Bàolǐsī Nígǔlāyēwéiqí Yèlìqīn (pinyin)
Japanese ボリス・ニコライェヴィッチ・イェリツィン (approx. translit. borisu nikorayevicchi yeritsin)
Korean 보리스 니콜라예비치 옐친 (approx. translit. boriseu nikollayebichi yelchin)

References

  1. Hayes, Bruce (2011); Introductory Phonology; John Wiley & Sons; ISBN 1444360132, 9781444360134. "The term orthographic transcription simply means that the words are written down using the customary spelling system (orthography) of the language." For a better view of the examples shown in Hayes's book see Fromkin, Victoria (2000); Linguistics: an introduction to linguistic theory; Wiley-Blackwell; ISBN 0631197117, 9780631197119
  2. 1 2 thefreedictionary.com/Transcription, citing Vinogradov, V. A., in The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). Retrieved March 19, 2012.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.