Category: News

14
Oct

Greek literature risks getting lost in translation

imageIf you write in a less well- known language, such as Irish, Finnish or Greek, the essential vehicles for reaching a wider readership are a reliable translator and a publisher who can exploit your book in the marketplace. This in turn requires a cultural policy underpinning the work of translation. But there is no government agency responsible for pushing Greek writers under the noses of commissioning editors, reviewers or the bulk-buying outlets.

In Greece, the Frasis project, managed by the national book centre, funds the translation of books published outside Greece. In its two years of existence, with a budget of €189,000, out of a total of 100 applications it has subsidised the translation of 28 books (at an average cost of €6,500), only four of them into English.

Read more: http://tinyurl.com/p6x2txs

14
Oct

This software reads your emotions via typing style

Can our typing style reveal our emotions? If we believe researchers here, a new computer programme can recognise people’s emotions based on how they type.

An emotionally intelligent online system can change teaching style or the contents of its lectures to better adapt to a particular student’s emotional state, a team of researchers noted.

Read more…

01
Oct

ProZ Translation Contest – 40dots among the 3 finalists! Yeah:-)

43The “finals round” is now underway in this pair. Viewers are invited to vote for their favorite translations at this time. The winner(s) in this pair will then be announced.

The finals round will end 30 Oct 2014 17:00 EET (GMT+2).

20
Sep
18
Sep

Do syllables exist?

How many syllables are in your name? You probably already know off the top of your head, but count them anyway. Most of us do the same thing when we’re counting. Putting more weight than usual on each beat, we number them off on our fingers.

[…] The syllable is an invisible thing, something that we can only really perceive and count when we say something out loud. It is hard to grasp scientifically and yet the basis for the most elegant things that humans have dreamed up out of the subtle alchemy of language use. Perhaps the elusiveness of the syllable’s true nature only makes our use of it in poetry the more mysterious and lovely. In sonnets or in the simple pulses of speech that make up your own name, we simply know that it’s there.

Read more: http://tinyurl.com/omlxl6k