Idioms Translation And Cultural Differences English Language Essay
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Abstract: As we know, language is bearer of culture and idioms are heavily culturally loaded phrases and sentences. To translate English idioms involves obstacles for Chinese features. When an idiom is being translated, we will find it often hard to be translated. While the key to translate is that its figurative meaning should be remained. In this paper, it is from living conditions, customs, religions belief and historical allusions to describe cultural differences between English and Chinese idioms, and detailed description of methods in English and Chinese idioms translation.
Key words: Language , Cultural differences , Idioms , Translation methods
1. Introduction
Language is the carrier of culture. Both English and Chinese language has a long history.They have a large number of idioms, they are implicitly, humor, serious and elegant. While idioms are a very important part of any language, and idiom translation plays an important role in translation. Idiom is a speech form or an expression of a given language that is peculiar to itself grammatically or cannot be understood from the individual meanings of its elements.
Idioms include colloquialisms, proverbs,slangs and so on. When we translate idioms from Chinese into English or English into Chinese, we should know the cultural differences between English and Chinese idioms, and we can find the right translation methods.
the Cultural Differences between Chinese and English Idioms
Idioms translation is an intercultural activity, therefore, we should take cultural differences into consideration when we translate them. And the cultural differences between English and Chinese idioms can be classified into four types.
2.1. From living conditions
The natural environment is the basis of human living and development. China is a country with continental climate, Chinese people live in the continent of Asia. Since ancient times, China is a large agricultural country, the land is important to people's life. Therefore, there are many idioms related to wind, agriculture and land-related. Such as "æ-©è‰é™¤æ ¹" ( stamp out the root of trouble ), "风调雨顺" ( seasonable weather for crop raising ), "挥土如金"( spend money like water ) "万事俱备åªæ¬ 东风" ( Everything is ready except the east wind ), "东风报春"( )Chinese people can understand its meaning, for British people it is difficult. Because in Chinese " east wind" symbolizes "spring" and " warmth ", and The United Kingdom is located in the western hemisphere north temperate zone, with marine climate. In England, " east wind "comes from the northern part of the European continent, and it symbolizes " chilly " and " unpleasant ",while " west wind " symbolizes " spring " in England, so they can not understand the real meaning of Chinese idiom.
In English there are many idioms related to water, fish, boat and so on, such as " as weak as water " (å¼±ä¸ç¦é£Ž), " in deep water " (陷入严é‡å›°å¢ƒ)" to keep one's head above water "(奋力图强)"," water under the bridge " (æ- 法挽回的过去)drink like a fish " (豪饮), " to miss the boat "(错失良机), " all at sea "(ä¸çŸ¥æ‰€æŽª).
2.2. From customs
There are many differences between English and Chinese customs. In China, people think themselves are descendant of the Dragon, the dragon is a symbol of auspicious animals. Thus, we have dragon-related idioms contain complimentary sense. Such as "望åæˆé¾™"(To expect one's son to become an outstanding personage), "龙凤呈祥"(Harmony reigns) and so on. In western countries, they think dragon is a fire-breathing animal and it is terrifying.
In addition, people's attitude toward the dog is different. In English-speaking countries, people think the dog is a faithful animal to human, such as "You're a lucky dog"(ä½ æ˜¯ä¸€ä¸ªå¹¸è¿å„¿),"Every dog has his day"(凡人都有å¾-æ„æ-¥).On the contrary, the dog is a lowly animal in China. Such as "狼心ç‹-肺" ( brutal and cold-blooded ),"ç‹-眼看人低"( the damned snobbish ),"ç‹-嘴里åä¸å‡ºè±¡ç‰™"( a dog's mouth emits no ivory ),etc.
There is another example, in Chinese culture, ox is the symbol of diligence. From ancient times, Chinese farmers went in for farming with the help of ox. So Chinese give love and praise to ox. Then in Chinese we have "力大如牛" when it is translated into English, it should be "as strong as a horse", Chinese people say "åƒç‰›ä¸€æ ·å‹¤åŠ³", in English, people say " work like a horse ". We use different animal to express the same meaning.
In Chinese, there are some idioms related to "eat ", for example "åƒä¸äº†å…œç€èµ°"means find oneself in serious trouble,"åƒè½¯ä¸åƒç¡¬"means can be persuaded by reason but not be cowed by force. Some idioms because of their distinctive national features, can not found in English corresponding expression.
2.3. From religions belief
Religious belief is an important part in culture. Different religious beliefs had different reflections in different idioms.
Chinese people believe in Buddhism and Taoism, therefore there are many Chinese idioms are related to Buddhism. Such as "借花献佛"( borrowing the opportunity ),"普度ä¼-生"( salvation of all sentient beings ),"å¹³æ-¶ä¸çƒ§é¦™ï¼Œæ€¥æ¥æŠ±ä½›è„š"( when the devil was sick, the devil a monk would be ),"é“高一尺,é”高一丈"( While the priest climb a post, the devil climb ten )etc.
While in English-speaking countries, people believe in Christianity. So they have many idioms related to Christianity. Such as " as poor as a church mouse "(一贫如æ´-)" God help those who help themselves "(上å¸å¸®åŠ©è‡ªåŠ©çš„人), " God sends fortune to fools "(傻人有傻ç¦)," Go to hell "(下地狱去)," God's mill goes slowly, but it grind well "(天网æ¢æ¢ç-而ä¸æ¼)," wash one's hands off "(æ´-手ä¸å¹²)," the Day of Judgement "(末æ-¥å®¡åˆ¤) and so on.
2.4. From historical allusions
An important part of historical culture is historical allusion, and England and China have a large number of idioms originated from historical allusion. These idioms are simple but far-reaching, and we often can not be understood from the literal meaning.
In Chinese we have "å®ˆæ ªå¾…å…”"( wait for windfalls ),"亡羊补牢"( better late than never ),"æ‹”è‹-助长"( spoil things by excessive enthusiasm ),"螳螂æ•è‰ï¼Œé»„雀在åŽ"( Mantis catch a cicada, siskin is hind.),"å››é¢æ¥šæŒ"( be pounded on all sides )etc.
Most English allusive idioms come from the Bible and Greek and Roman mythology. Such as " Achilles' heel "(唯一致命的弱点)," Penelope's web "(永远完ä¸æˆçš„工作)," The Trojan Horse "(木马计;æš-è-çš„å±é™©)," Meet one's Waterloo "(一败涂地)," swan song "(ç»å”±)," arrow of Cupid "(丘比特之ç®)," A Pandora's box "(潘多拉之盒,å³ç¾éš¾ã€éº»çƒ¦ã€ç¥¸å®³çš„æ ¹æº)," The apple of discord "(祸患;争端)and so on.
Principle and methods of idiom translation
Idioms are usually short in form but profound in sense. Each idiom bears an image and a figurative meaning. Idioms translation should be faithful. " Faithful " means the Chinese version must be faithful to the English idiom at least in figurative sense, and English idioms are not exactly equal to the Chinese idioms in figurative sense though they appear to be. For example," pull one's leg " is not equal to "拉åŽè…¿", " move heaven and earth " is not equal to "翻天覆地" and " child's play " is not equal to "å„¿æˆ". In order to be faithful in translation ,we should convey the original figurative meanings and sacrifice the images. Therefore, " pull one's leg " can be rendered into Chinese as "å-笑æŸäºº"," move heaven and earth " can be rendered into "尽力" and " child's play " can be rendered into Chinese as "易如å掌". All these renditions are faithful to the original figurative meanings.
So each idiom bears an image and a figurative meaning. An English idiom and a Chinese idiom which are same in image maybe different in figurative meaning. If we can transfer both the image and the figurative meaning by literal translation, we should use literal translation. If we can not, we should better keep the figurative meaning and sacrifice the image. Then, we should use free translation. Generally speaking, the common methods of translating idioms are the following types:
1. Literal translation
2. Free translation
3. Literal translation + Free translation
4. Adapted translation
3.1. Literal translation
A literal translation is a translation that follows closely the form of the source language. If the image and the figurative meaning are not contradictory to each other, then both of them can be retained in the translation, we should make efforts to reduce the loss in translation and use literal translation method as much as possible. For instance, " time is money "is translated into "æ-¶é-´å°±æ˜¯é‡‘é’±", which preserves its original image and figurative meaning.
There are many idioms of this kind:
In English,
1) Forbidden fruit is sweet. ç¦æžœåˆ†å¤-甜。
2) In the country of the blind the one-eyed man is king. 盲人国ä¸ï¼Œç‹¬çœ¼ç§°é›„。
3) If you run after two hares, you will catch neither. åŒæ-¶è¿½ä¸¤å…”,全都抓ä¸åˆ°ã€‚
4) Half a loaf is better than no bread. 有åŠå-é¢åŒ…总比没有好。
5) The Trojan horse. 特洛伊木马。
6) Blood is thicker than water. 血浓于水。
7) Misfortunes never come singly. 祸ä¸å•è¡Œã€‚
8) An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth. 以眼还眼,以牙还牙。
In Chinese,
1)明枪易躲,æš-ç®éš¾é˜²ã€‚It is easy to dodge a spear in the open, but hard to guard against an arrow shot from hiding.
2)城é-¨å¤±ç«ï¼Œæ®ƒåŠæ± 鱼。A fire on the city wall brings disaster to the fish in the moat.
3)è·¯é¥çŸ¥é©¬åŠ›ï¼Œæ-¥ä¹…è§äººå¿ƒã€‚As a long road tests a horse's strength, so a long task proves a person's heart.
4)åˆç”Ÿç‰›çŠŠä¸æ€•è™Žã€‚New-born calves make little of tigers.
5)远水ä¸è§£è¿‘渴。Distant water can't quench present.
As the language roots of the cultural is different, literal translation is likely to be ambiguous and vague. In this case, we should add annotation. Such as:
"三个è‡çš®åŒ ,赛过诸葛亮" We know "Chukeh Liang" was a famous person in Chinese history, but maybe some western people have nothing about him. We can translate it into " Three cobblers withe their wits combined equal Chukeh Liang, the master mind " .
"çé-¨å¼„æ-§" ( show off one's proficiency with axe before Lu Ban, the master carpenter )
And in English, " to carry coals to New Castle " (è¿ç…¤åˆ°çº½å¡æ-¯å°”;指多æ¤ä¸€ä¸¾ï¼Œçº½å¡æ-¯å°”是英国的产煤ä¸å¿ƒ)
3.2. Free translation
Free translation means transmitting the figurative meaning in the original English idiom by means of free translation. And it usually loses the original image, like the translation of the English idiom " Call a spade a spade ", whose image and figurative meaning can not be accepted by the Chinese readers at the same time if they are literally rendered into Chinese as "把铲åå«é“²å". So the translator can put it into Chinese as "直言ä¸è®³", which is readily accepted by the Chinese readers.
There are many idioms of this kind:
In Chinese,
1)打开天çª-说亮è¯ã€‚Frankly speaking.
2)"东æ-½æ•ˆé¢¦" is a Chinese idiom, for Chinese people, it is easy to understand, and if we translate it into " Dong Shi imitates Xi Shi ", it will very difficult for western people to understand. Because they maybe don't know Dong Shi and Xi Shi. So we can translate it into " crude imitation with ludicrous effect "
3)失之东隅,收之桑榆。What one loses on the swings one gets back on the roundabouts. ( If we use method of lateral translation," lose where the sun rises and gain where the sun set", the readers will can not understand it. )
4)å¡žç¿å¤±é©¬ï¼Œç„‰çŸ¥éžç¦ï¼ŸA loss may turn out to be a gain. ( Due to the readers don't know the background of this idiom, we can not translate into " When the old man on the frontier lost his mare, who could have guessed it was a blessing it was a blessing in disguise?" )
5)庆父ä¸æ»ï¼Œé²éš¾æœªå·²ã€‚There will always be trouble until the trouble-maker is removed. ( If we translate it into " Until Qing Fu is done away with, the crisis in the state of Lu will not be over ", the readers will not understand a person's name and country name. )
6)æ¤åœ°æ- 银三百两。A guilty person gives himself away by conspicuously protesting his innocence. ( We can not translate it into " No 300 taels of silver buried here. ")
In English,
1) a skeleton in the cupboard (家丑)
2) It is an ill wind that blows nobody good. 对人人都有害的事,天下少有。( It can not be translated into "ä¸ç»™ä»»ä½•äººå¸¦æ¥å¥½å¤„的风的确是æ¶é£Žã€‚")
3) Every man has a fool in his sleeve. 人人都有糊涂的æ-¶å€™ã€‚( It can not be translated into "人人è¢-å里都装ç€ä¸ªå‚»ç“œã€‚")
4) When Greek meets Greek, then comes the tug of war. 两雄相争,其æ--必烈。( It can not be translated into "希腊人é‡ä¸Šå¸Œè…Šäººï¼Œå®šæœ‰ä¸€åœºå¥½æ--。")
Some idioms from the religious literature, usually we need to use free translation. Such as: "四大皆空"( All physical existence is vanity),"å…æ ¹æ¸…å‡€"( free from human desires and passions ),"å› ç¼˜"( principal and subsidiary causes ),"红尘"( human society ) and so on.
3.3. Literal translation and Free translation
This method means to transfer both the figurative meaning and image of source language idiom into target language with the help of free translation. This translation method can help retain the original figurative meaning and image, which can be accepted by the target language readers.
In Chinese:
ç«çƒ§çœ‰æ¯› the fire is singeing the eyebrows --- a desperate situation
è´Ÿè†è¯·ç½ª proffer a birch and ask for a flogging --- offer a humble apology
çé-¨å¼„æ-§ show off one's skill with the axe before Lu Ban the master carpenter --- display one's slight skill before an expert
In English:
A bull in a china shop 公牛é-¯è¿›ç“·å™¨åº---- 肆æ„æ£ä¹±
The cat weeps over the mouse. 猫å“è€é¼ ---å‡æ…ˆæ‚²
There is no rose without a thorn.玫瑰皆有刺---ä¹ä¸æ¯”有苦
Every flow has its ebb.潮有涨è½æ-¥---人åˆç››è¡°æ-¶
3.4. Adapted translation
Some English idioms are found exact counterparts in Chinese which are dissimilar to them in images. In this case we can use these idiomatic Chinese expressions to replace the English idioms. For examples:
In English,
1) He that sows the wind will reap the whirlwind. 玩ç«è€…必自焚。
2) Like begets like. 龙生龙,凤生凤。
3) Many straws may bind an elephant. 烂麻æ“æˆç»³ï¼Œä¹Ÿèƒ½æ‹‰åƒæ-¤ã€‚
4) When shepherds quarrel, the wolf has a winning game. 鹬蚌相争,渔ç¿å¾-利。
In Chinese,
1) åŠç“¶é†‹ï¼Œå‡ºäº‹æ•…。A little knowledge is a dangerous thing.
2) å°‘è§å¤šæ€ªã€‚Wonder is the daughter of ignorance.
3) 三æ€è€ŒåŽè¡Œã€‚Look before you leap.
4) 如鱼å¾-水。Like a duck to water.
5) 有其父必有其å。Like father like son.
Conclusion:
Idioms are a very important part of any language. So necessary knowledge of cultural differences is indispensable to the translation of idioms. Each idiom bears an image and a figurative meaning. When we are translating an idiom, it's a basic requirement that we should remain its figurative meaning. For the translator, he must have a good command of English and Chinese language and cultures.