Money matters.
What does the phrase mean? Does it refer to the matters related to money (money, n.; matters, n)? Or does it mean that having some money really does matter (money, n.; matter, vb)? Is matter a noun or a verb?
Phrases such as these are potentially confusing, not only to readers in English but also to translators who translate such disjointed, disconnected phrases that appear in the user-assistance deliverables that we as techwriters create. In today's globalised economy, where the bigger of the multinational companies earn a significant portion of their revenue from outside their home country, we need to be careful about what we document. Why? Because, in all likelihood, what we document is going to be translated into 10 different languages, if not more. When we write in English, if we could keep the following points in mind, it makes life a lot simpler for translators. Trust me :) I used to handle localisation projects (before I decided that I'd rather write the very source that gets localised).
(1) Write short sentences
Writing short sentences is the equivalent of speaking slowly. A sentence that is long-winded has to be read more than once to be understood. A translator works under deadlines, and re-reading stuff takes away that much of the translator's time. Consider the following sentence:
The YST server ensures that all hosting servers of a YST product or service always sync with each other with respect to product versions of the services hosted by them.
Phew!
(2) Do not use compound nouns that have more than two words
Compound nouns with more than two words are potentially ambiguous (see the title of this post). Consider the following sentence:
The ABC file configuration program was not installed on this computer.
I can have the following three interpretations of this sentence:
- The configuration program of ABC file was not installed on this computer.
- The program of file configuration of ABC was not installed on this computer.
- The program, called ABC, of file configuration was not installed on this computer.
If clarity requires a few more words, use them. If you cannot avoid using three- or four-word noun phrases, use hyphenation to remove potential ambiguity. Consider the following revision:
The ABC file-configuration program was not installed on this computer.
Sounds better?
(3) Do not begin a heading with a verb
Consider the following sentence:
Print the Expense Summary
Are you telling a reader to go ahead and print the expense summary (in which case the heading's fine) or are you trying to tell a reader how to print an expense summary. If it's the latter, do add a "How to..." at the beginning of the heading - it orients the reader to your think-track.
Again, consider the following sentence:
Printing the Expense Summary
Do you mean that you (or the printer) is at this moment printing the expense summary or do you want to describe the process of printing the expense summary?
(4) Do not embed text in images
Else, it will take that much more time to do the following:
- Extract the source text from the image.
- Create a duplicate image minus the text.
- Insert the translated text back into the image.
Or, if you cannot avoid doing so, be aware of the extra effort needed to localise the images.
(5) Do not expect the translators to be familiar with all sorts of content-authoring tools
You may have Vista-equipped workstations that run Structured FrameMaker, which integrates seamlessly into Webworks to produce beautifully compiled help-files. Your documents may be stored as XML modules. But do not expect all translators to have all the software that your company uses or to be familiar with XML and HTML tags. You have the following possible solutions:
- Send across the source text in a format that is editable by the majority (examples: Notepad, Word, Excel) and budget for the effort needed to rework the translation in the format that you want.
- Pay the translator for software that the translator may have to buy to cater to your special needs, and train the translator to use that software
- Look for a translator who can handle the file formats that you use.
Each of these options has a cost-time trade-off that you have to evaluate.
(6) Share your glossary with the translator
In other words, speak the same language. If you think that "trend graph" plots more than one Y against time X and your translator thinks that "trend graph" is a graph that shows the change of one Y against time X, then we are not speaking the same lingo.
Similarly, if you have a terminology in the target language, share it with the translator.
(7) Provide for text expansion and contraction
Be aware that translations to other languages may take up more space or less space than the source English text. Arrange your page layout and document layout to accommodate the variation. This may be important if your manual gets packed in the same carton as the software, and suddenly you find that the document is bulkier or larger than you what you planned.
The same holds true for UI elements. If you can have a say in the UI design, arrange the buttons and captions in such a manner that expansion and contraction of text is taken care of.
(8) Be available to answer queries
Make that extra effort to reach out to a team you've never seen, and probably never even spoken to. Your translators may be scattered over the globe, working in a time-zone different from yours, and they may not be subject matter experts. They may often stumble upon words and phrases that are not clear to them. Budget for time-zone differences and let the translators know when they can expect a response to their queries. Remember that translators are as much pressurised by deadlines as you are and their output is directly dependent on the feedback they get from you.I am sure there are more points, but these are the ones that I think can take care of a lot many things.
5 comments:
Congrats on such a lovely blog. I would only ad that "money matters" is journalism, not technical writing. A bit of a strawman to start a TW post, but a good example of verb/noun confusion.
YFJ
I agree that the title "Money matters" is a bit of a strawman, but I couldn't think up anything else. I possibly couldn't have had "File control block switch" as the heading - This was the phrase that a translator once asked me to explain, which started me off thinking...and to writing this blog post. Yep, "Money matters" does sound rather un-WYSIWYG.
Thanks for your encouraging words about the blog in general :).
Congrats, nice post. very useful tips. Thanks
Hey Aninidita,
I have been involved in some localization efforts in my previous organization, and I think the tips you have given are totally valid and needed to ensure that the correct meaning comes across.
I do have one question though, what do you think of gerunds? I think gerunds are difficult to translate as far the translation of specific words is concerned.
Can you let me know your views on the same?
Shweta Shetye :)
Hi Shweta,
Personally, I avoid gerunds. Whenever I can substitute a gerund with another phrase, I do so. For example, instead of writing "Using the disk clean-up tool is easy." I would write "The disk clean-up tool is easy to use."
I agree with you when you say gerunds may be difficult to translate. I've had translators seek clarifications for words such as "bridging", "networking", and "retrieving". But I feel this may have had more to do with ambiguous sentence structures than with gerunds per se, especially when these words get used in user-interface headings and get sent for translation without any context.
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