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Connotative meaning and translation issues the communicative value an expression has by virtue of what it refers to, over and above its purely conceptual content” (Leech, 1974: 14)

Connotative meaning and translation issues

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Connotative meaning and translation issues. “ the communicative value an expression has by virtue of what it refers to , over and above its purely conceptual content” (Leech, 1974: 14) . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Connotative meaning and translation issues

Connotative meaning and translation issues

“the communicative value an expression has by virtue of what it refers to, over and above its purely conceptual content” (Leech, 1974:

14)

Page 2: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•For example, the word ‘woman’ is defined conceptually by three properties ‘human’, ‘female’, ‘adult’. In addition, the word includes other psychological and social properties such as ‘gregarious’, ‘subject to maternal instinct’. Leech maintains that ‘woman’ has the putative properties of being frail, prone to tears, and emotional

Page 3: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•Based on Leech’s classification of meaning (1974: 26), Dickins et al (2002: 66-74) distinguish six major types of connotative as follows:

Page 4: Connotative meaning and translation issues

1 .Attitudinal meaning •The expression does not merely denote the

referent in a neutral way, but also hints at some attitude to it.

• For instance, ‘the police’, ‘the filth’ and ‘the boys in blue’ have the same denotative meaning. However, the expressions have different connotative meanings. ‘The police’ is a neutral expression, ‘the filth’ has pejorative overtones while ‘the boys in blue’ has affectionate ones.

Page 5: Connotative meaning and translation issues

Example 1:•In the following example, the translator has

used the term ‘lady’ rather than ‘woman’ since ‘lady’ has overtones of respect.• 

• ..... النساء ماليين بين من أنثاي يا بيروت يا آه•Ah Beirut….my lady amongst millions of women.

• 

Page 6: Connotative meaning and translation issues

2 Example بيتا بيتا البيوت يقتحمون راحوا قد و

“They have raided homes one by one”Here the word “homes” can be contrasted with its near –synonym “houses’. “Houses” is a neutral word in English, whereas “homes” has warm emotional connotations.

Page 7: Connotative meaning and translation issues

2 .Associative meaning •It may consist of expectations

wrongly associated with the referent that are rightly or of the expression

Page 8: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•For example, the term ‘Crusade’ has strongly positive associations in English,

whereas its Arabic equivalent حملة has negative associations, sinceصليبية

the word is associated with the Crusades to Palestine in the Middle Ages

Page 9: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•Conversely, the term جهادin Arabic has positive associations, since the word is associated with one of the five pillars of Islam, and those who are killed in the cause of Allah are rewarded with heaven on the Day of Judgement

Page 10: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•On the contrary, the term جهادhas negative associations in the West, since the word is connected with international extremist organizations, especially after the September 11 attacks.

Page 11: Connotative meaning and translation issues

الهرم • جسمها على الغطاء+ شد ثم•Then he pulled the cover over her frail body

The translator has taken the association ofهرم and has accordingly used the denotative

meaning ‘frail; to render this associative meaning of هرم

Page 12: Connotative meaning and translation issues

3 .Affective meaning

•It is related to the emotive effect worked on the addressee by the choice of

expression .

•For instance, the two expressions ‘silence please’, and ‘shut up’, or الصمت الرجاء

and أسكتin Arabic share the same denotative meaning of ‘be quiet .’

Page 13: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•However, the speaker’s attitude to the listener produces a different affective impact, with the first utterance producing a polite effect and the second one producing an impolite one.

Page 14: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•The translator should choose a suitable lexical item that produces the same effect on the TL reader as that intended by the author of the original text on the SL reader.

Page 15: Connotative meaning and translation issues

4 .Allusive meaning

•It occurs when an expression evokes an associated saying or quotation in such a way that the meaning of that saying or quotation becomes part of the overall meaning of the expression

Page 16: Connotative meaning and translation issues

For example, the oath و باإلخالص التام االلتزاماليسر و العسر في والطاعة والسمع الثقة

المكره و .والمنشطwhich members of the Muslim Brotherhood

swore to their leader, Hassan Al Banna, alludes to the Quranic verses : يسر العسر مع إن ن إ. ا

يسرا العسر مع

Page 17: Connotative meaning and translation issues

5 .Reflected meaning

•The meaning given to the expression over and above the denotative meaning which it has in that context by the fact that it also calls to mind another meaning of the same word

or phrase.

Page 18: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•For example, the word ‘rat’ in ‘John was a rat’ has two meanings :

•The first denotative meaning is: someone who deserts his friends .

•The second connotative reflected meaning is the animal ‘rat’ .

•In Arabic to call someone حمار means denotatively ‘stupid’. The word حمارalso refers to the animal

‘donkey’, which in this context provides a connotative reflected meaning

Page 19: Connotative meaning and translation issues

6 .Collocative meaning •“the associations a word acquires

on account of the meaning of words which tend to occur in its environment

Page 20: Connotative meaning and translation issues

• ‘Pretty’ and ‘handsome’ share the common grounds of ‘good looking’, but they are differentiated by the range of nouns with which they are likely to co-occur. ‘Pretty’ collocates with ‘girl’, ‘boy’, woman’, ‘flower’, while ‘handsome’ collocates with ‘boy’, ‘man’, ‘vessel’, etc

Page 21: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•Baker says that the propositional (denotative) meaning of a word does not always determine the

collocational patterning .

Page 22: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•For example, English speakers typically ‘pay a visit’ but less typically ‘make a visit’ and they do not ‘perform a visit’. Another example of collocation in English is ‘rancid’ and ‘addled’. Though the two words have the same denotative meaning, they have different collocational patterning. ‘Addled’ collocates with ‘eggs’, while ‘rancid’ collocates with ‘butter’

Page 23: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•Collocations differ from one language into another. According to Baker (1992: 49) English and Arabic use different collocational patterns that reflect the preferences of each community for certain modes of expression and certain linguistic configurations

Page 24: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•English Collocation•Arabic equivalent

•deliver a letter/telegramتلغ \ • خطابا يسلم رافا•deliver a speech/lecture• \ محاضرة خطبة يلقي•deliver newsأخبارا • ينقل•deliver a blowضربة • يوجه•deliver a verdict• حكما يصدر•deliver a babyامرأ • ةيولد

Page 25: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•English Collocation•Arabic equivalent•catch a fishيصطاد • سمكة•catch a coldيصاب • بنزلة برد•catch a trainيلحق • بالقطار•catch fireتشتعل • فيه النار

Page 26: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•According to Dickins et al (2002: 71) the two languages also have different collocations in the use of conjoined phrases.

Page 27: Connotative meaning and translation issues

• •For instance, the English equivalent of أصحاب

الود أهل و would be ‘the rich andالنفوذpowerful’, rather than ‘the powerful and rich”,

while the collocation ولحمه دمه isمنequivalent to ‘his own flesh and blood “, rather than ‘his own blood and flesh’. Other examples

include ‘life and death ’والحياة andالموت‘day and night ’نهار ليل

Page 28: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•Collocations constitute a major problem for translators. As Newmark (1988:180) maintains “The translator will be caught every time, not by his grammar, which is probably suspiciously ‘better’ than an educated native’s, not by his vocabulary, which may well be wider, but by

his unacceptable or improbable collocations.”

Page 29: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•In translating from English into Arabic or vice versa the translator faces the difficult task of finding appropriate collocations in the target language, as he is dealing with two languages that are linguistically and culturally distinct. Therefore, the translator should pay considerable attention to the collocational differences between the two languages in order to choose the appropriate collocation in the target language.

Page 30: Connotative meaning and translation issues

•A translator who renders ‘shake hands’ as would give an erroneous يهزاأليدي

translation. The Arabic equivalent for the English collocation ‘shake hands’ is يصافح ,

which is not a collocation in Arabic