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  • ГУСЬКОВА (1). 1. Инфинитив в функции определения


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    § 14. НЕОЛОГИЗМЫ

    I. Неологизмы — это новые слова, еще не зарегистрированные в
    англо-русских словарях, или не зафиксированные словарями новые
    значения слов, уже существующих в языке.

    Для уяснения значения неологизма рекомендуется: 1) выяснить значение слова из контекста, 2) обратиться к послед­нему изданию одного из англо-русских или англо-английских сло­варей и попытаться отыскать данное слово в разделе «Новые сло­ва», 3) постараться выяснить значение нового слова, исходя из его структуры.

    II. При переводе неологизмов используются следующие пере­
    водческие приемы: 1) транскрипция, 2) транслитерация, 3) кальки­
    рование, 4) описательный перевод.

    145

    1. Примеры транскрибирования неологизмов: beatniks битники,
      beatles битлзы, briefing брифинг, p.r.(public relations) — пиар.

    2. Транслитерация в настоящее время практически не употребля­
      ется:
      inauguration инаугурация, Benelux Бенелюкс.

    3. Примеры калькирования неологизмов (т. е. воспроизведения
      средствами русского языка значения и морфологической структуры
      нового английского слова или словосочетания): air bridge воздушный
      мост, shadow cabinet теневой кабинет, nuclear umbrella ядерный
      зонтик, brain trust мозговой трест.

    4. Примеры описательного перевода: to lobby посылать делега­
      тов для оказания давления на членов парламента
      депутатов их
      округа;
      deterrent средство устрашения; сдерживающее средство,
      оружие; redundancy увольнение по сокращению штатов; landslide
      полная (блестящая) победа на выборах; gimmick трюк, штучка,
      хитроумное приспособление; какое-либо новшество, направленное
      на то, чтобы привлечь всеобщее внимание; brain drain эмиграция
      квалифицированных кадров («утечка умов»); brain washing идеоло­
      гическая обработка («промывание мозгов»); hawks and doves сто­
      ронники расширения войны и сторонники мира («ястребы и голу­
      би»); brain power квалифицированные кадры; brain tank мозговой
      трест;Ътг\п bank банк информации; think tank исследовательская
      группа, мозговой трест, резервуар научных кадров, научный центр;
      fact sheet перечень (документ о ...) фактических данных; skinheaded
      бритоголовые (часто о фашиствующей молодежи); low profile
      скромный, малозаметный; high profile яркий, очень заметный, вы­
      дающийся,
      runaways предприятия, переведенные на другую терри­
      торию или за границу.

    III. Образование неологизмов.

    1) Расширение значения. Слово, употребленное в различных контекстах, приобретает новые оттенки значения, а в ряде случаев и новые значения. Так, слово confrontation -первоначально означало очная ставка, сличение, сопоставление. С течением времени это слово стало употребляться в словосочетании confrontation of armed forces и приобрело значение соприкосновение вооруженных сил. В настоящее время слово confrontation приобрело значение (откры­тое) столкновение, противостояние, противоборство. Такие слова, как deterrent, redundancy, landslide и другие, также изменяли свое значение в связи с возникновением новой ситуации, возникшей по­требности.

    Так, например, прилагательное «green» расширило свое перво­начальное значение и в различных сочетаних в разное время означа-

    ло: a green revolution — «зеленая» революция (революция в сель­ском хозяйстве ряда развивающихся стран, связанная с введением продуктов, полученных с использованием генной инженерии); the «greens» — доллары; green power — власть денег; the Green Partyпартия «зеленых» (например, в Германии), выступающая в защиту окружающей среды; to do smth. in a «green» way — делать что-либо экологически чистым путем.

    2) Префиксальное и суффиксальное образование новых слов.
    Префикс re- означает повторность действия: rethinking переосмыс­
    ление, renazification ренацификация, retraining переподготовка, пере­
    квалификация,
    reimposition введение чего-л. снова.

    Префикс de- придает значение обратного действия demilitarize демилитаризовать, denazify денацифицировать, denazification дена­цификация, denuclearise лишать ядерного оружия, deescalation деэс­калация, inflation инфляция, reflation рефляция, deflation дефляция.

    Суффикс -ее образует существительные, которые очень часто пе­редают значение объекта действия: detainee задержанный (аресто­ванный), parolee взятый на поруки; retiree ушедший на пенсию.

    3) Образование неологизмов путем конверсии: the needy нуж­
    дающиеся; to front-page помещать на первой странице; tosnowball
    быстро распространяться, увеличиваться (расти, как снежный
    ком), the go-ahead предоставление « зеленой улицы».

    4) Появилось много слов типа teach-in. Эти слова употребляются
    для обозначения различных форм протеста или разъяснительной
    кампании. Глагольный корень указывает на место или форму про­
    теста или кампании: teach-in диспут протеста (протест в форме
    проведения диспута); pray-in протест в церкви; sit-in демонстрация
    сидящих в знак протеста людей;
    sitters-in участники сидячей демон­
    страции.

    Иногда такие слова указывают, на что направлено требование протестующих: buy-in требование равных возможностей при по­купке (дома); apply-in требование равных возможностей при найме на работу.

    5) Образование неологизмов путем объединения двух слов:
    information + entertainment = infortainment; documentary + drama =
    docudrama; election + engineering = electioneering.

    При переводе восстанавливаются полные значения обоих слов (например, информационно-развлекательный).

    В результате нашумевшего во время президентства Р. Никсона политического скандала — использование в ходе его предвыборной


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    кампании шпионажа для получения информации о планах соперни­чающей Демократической партии, национальный комитет которой находился в отеле Watergate,— слово gate в сочетании с именами собственными, иногда нарицательными, приобрело значение грубо­го политического скандала и привело к образованию ряда новых слов: Watergate Уотергейт; Lockheed-gate Локхидгейт — скандал, связанный с дачей компанией «Локхид» взяток японскому прави­тельству для получения выгодных заказов; Reagangate, debategate, briefinggate брифингейт—скандал, связанный с кражей людьми Рей­гана во время президентских выборов конфиденциальных докумен­тов Дж. Картера.

    В последнее время в образовании неологизмов стали участвовать имена известных компаний Кока-Колы, Макдональдс и др. Так, to become the «Coca-Cola» of global wireless communicationстать всемирно известной (как Кока-Копа) компанией сотовой связи.

    Проанализируйте и переведите следующие предложения.

    1. «The major deterrent is in a man's mind. The major deterrent in
      the future is going to be not only what we have, but what we do, what we
      are willing to do, what they think we will do. Stamina, guts, standing up
      for the things that we say — those are deterrents,» — wrote Admiral
      A.Burke in 1960.

    2. Local officials who obstruct or refuse voters registration can also be
      severely punished (though jury trials are a somewhat flimsy deterrent in
      the south of the U.S.A.).

    3^ There was a dramatic confrontation between one of the dismissed lecturers and the Director.

    1. The Advisory Committee on Juvenile Delinquency— set up by the
      former Home Secretary and widely regarded as a gimmick — has been
      disbanded, the Commons was told yesterday. Its work will be taken over
      by specialist bodies.

    2. Stamp trading—the latest «something for nothing» gimmick aimed
      at shoppers — is coming under heavy fire this weekend from cooperative
      and retail trade chiefs.

    3. The Cambodien authorities have supplied the returnees with food,
      clothing and other essentials.

    4. When House and Senate conferees meet to reconcile conflicting
      versions of a bill, staff assistants get into the act. They formulate possible
      compromises and translate the agreements reached into legislative lan­
      guage.




    1. Top British economists today fired a deadly broadside at govern­
      ment monetarist policies and called for a « reflation» U-tum.

    2. Pressure is certainly building up before next month's budget for the
      trimming of the government's sails and a modest dose
      of reflation to soak
      up some of the unemployed.

    However, there is no indication that the Premier is seriously listening to these appeals, nor that the Cabinet « wets» are yet strong enough to force him to change course.

    10. America's smaller governments are flexing their muscles; and
    devolution, which used to mean the shifting of power to the states, now
    increasingly means the shifting of power to cities and townships too.

    1 l7)However, the president's drive toward «deregulation» goes in ex­actly the opposite direction, proposing to ease restrictions on coal dust and air pollution in general.

    (f2?)Natural gas decontrol will have an explosive effect on inflation, while, at the same time, it will rob the economy of billions of dollars of productive capita! needed to create jobs.

    13.)Не also repeated Britain's desire to see this question settled by the Genera! Assembly as soon as possible, but there is still no indication whether Britain is actively lobbying for this behind the scenes.

    1. The car workers' lobby last week was an important step in the right
      direction. The issue should be pressed throughout the trade union move­
      ment and taken up by the workers in all industries.

    2. The movement «to kill the Bill» may snowball to irresistible pro­
      portions by the time when the Trades Union Congress recall conference
      on June 5.

    3. The US administration has given Israel the go-ahead to sell certain
      US-supplied military equipment to third countries, according to Israeli
      television.

    4. Bank workers' leaders yesterday gave the go-ahead for a series of
      selective one-day strikes at Barclays and Lloyds computer centres starting
      next week.

    5. With an officially estimated 50,000 jobs lost to plant closures and
      runaways between January and September, organized labor here (in Cali­
      fornia) has been pressing for protection.


    6. When the EU Parliament refused last month to approve the budget
      because of graft and mismanagement charges, the Socialists introduced a
      censure vote as a substitute for a confidence motion. But in doing this,
      they touched off an unprecedented movement of revolt among deputies
      ranging from Greens to the far right.


    148

    149

    i

    1. The proposal is being backed by the moto industry, which fears
      that reuse and recycling targets may prove impossible unless vehicles are
      channeled into «green» dismantling and scrap yards.

    2. The editorial of the New York Times proceeds on the assumption
      that the main problem confronting the United States is «the debilitated
      state of American industry and the need for changes in Government pol­
      icy to revive it».

    This is, in essence, the repeatedly tried and bankrupt «trickle down» policy. The corporate establishment seated in Washington decrees meas­ures to «save» maximum profit appropriation, with the possibility that something will trickle down to the mass of people.

    22. Reaganites have their pet project — a formula which strongly fa­
    vors big business by faster depreciation writeoffs. This measure is par­
    ticularly opposed by organized labor as a big business ripoff.

    Next week the candidate will announce a supposedly «new» eco­nomic policy, which will also include big tax cuts for big business, on the «trickle down» theory. That theory argues that big business should get a lot so a little can trickle down to the people.

    (23) Honest Clintonites admit that the teak probably came from their own side.

    1. Supply-side economic theory argues the economic growth is a re­
      sult of promoting production rather than increasing consumption. If the
      rewards of production are stifled through high taxes and burdensome
      government requirements, potential producers will not engage in produc­
      tive enterprises and the economy will not grow, according to the supply
      siders,

    2. Editorial-page article, sings a supply-side true believer's praises of
      the sales tax relief granted by the internet Tax Freedom Act. Unfortu­
      nately, it only provided tax relief from sales tax on Internet access charges —
      such as the $ 21.95 or so that users pay for monthly access.

    26) Thanks mainly to their workaholic new chairman, Germany's Christian. Dempcrats have bounced back surprisingly well from their thumping defeat in the general election seven months ago.

    [27)« Scandilux» is a newly coined phrase, current in Washington, to describe a trend in some smaller NATO countries toward becoming ab­sorbed in domestic political questions and neglecting broader issues of Western security.

    28. American think tanks offer prolific proposals for Transatlantic re­design.


    1. Graham Leicester, director of the Scottish Council Foundation, a
      think-tank, says that Scotland has one of the highest rates of child poverty
      in Europe.

    2. Downing Street yesterday moved swiftly to deny support for pro­
      posals from the Government's favoured think-tank for root-and-branch
      reform of the monarchy.

    3. According to a recent study of the brain-drain problem, the out­
      flow of highly trained personnel from many developing countries to a few
      major developed countries is increasing at a rapid rate. The study reveals
      that the United States and Canada are the main beneficiaries of the
      brain
      drain.

    4. The term « brain-washing» was first used by an American jour­
      nalist and originally the word used to describe indoctrination techniques.
      But it has since spread to refer to any form of influence that one disagrees
      with. At first conjured up as some «mysterious oriental device», it is now
      understood as an organized form of influencing individuals, groups or
      masses.

    щ)Skinhead groups (of Central Europe) are well run. They distribute propaganda printed by American neo-Nazis in various languages and send out «skinzines» illegally through the post.

    34. Armed skinheads, chanting «Sieg Heil», mounted «a revenge
    raid» on black people in a London suburb, an Old Bailey jury was told
    yesterday.

    Between 30 and 100 white youths, some with their heads shorn almost bald attacked about 100 to 150 black people in cinema queue in Wool­wich.

    35. Not content with slogans inciting to violence, some of the demon­
    strators acted in the tradition of the American lynchers. Spotting a long­
    haired youth, they jumped off their lorry shouting: « Get him, kill him, he
    is a
    beatnik, he burnt our flag.»

    1. The Minister of Economy need not conclude that the British
      worker is too cussed to fit into an economic plan, or that he will inevita­
      bly frustrate labour mobility. But grandiose general statement in White­
      hall about «shaking out labour» and
      redeployment are only convincing if
      they are accompanied by practical measures to make the intention a reality.

    2. In July a team of U.N. communications specialists moved into the
      country almost at the very moment the first contingents of «blue hel­
      mets» were deplaning at the Leopoldville airport.

    (li/The biggest teach-in for London Telephone Region engineers is to be launched early next year.


    150

    151

    39. Workers on strike in several enterprises have occupied their plants and are staying day and night. The first to start the sit-in and sleep-in strike were the workers of the nationally owned Sud-Aviation plant at Nantes.

    4О.^Не indicated in his statement that lowering the U.S. profile ap­pears to be a reasonable approach to the problem.

    1. He himself is doubtless aware the low-profile concept still leaves a
      number of questions unanswered. Some of the most pertinent.

    2. The President indicated in his statement that lowering the U.S.
      profile appears to involve a process of drawing up a list spelling out when
      the United States will—and when it will not interfere in Asia ...

    3. All of this adds up to what in diplomatic jargon has come to be
      known as the Administration's «low-profile» Asian policy. Boiled down
      to its essentials, low profile means that the U.S. will seek maximum influ­
      ence at minimum risk.

    44.,: President of the Czeck Republic yesterday had dinner with the Queen at the start of a high-profile trip intended to honour his role in leading his country to democracy.

    1. Buy Malaysia! Well, that is what some high-profile brokerages are
      suddenly telling clients. An expected easing of the capital controls is the
      chief reason behind the change of heart.


    2. High-profile miscarriages of justice persuaded many judges, law­
      yers and politicians that courts, no matter how careful, could never avoid
      executing some innocent people.

    3. The Russian National Orchestra has the highest profile, if only be­
      cause its independence gives it freedom of maneuver.


    4. The administration should put people to work by spending on liv-
      ingry, not weaponry,

    5. The picture of a European economy in perpetual decline is a cari­
      cature. For example, American punditry has ignored the one-time effect
      of German unification in slowing European growth.

    5Cf. In the journalistic labeling game, any political scandal touching the presidency is now a Something-Gate.

    1. Israel's rancorous election campaign was rocked Wednesday by a
      break-in at the Washington offices of a US political pollster advising
      Ehud Barak. The incident, which the Israeli media likened to Watergate,
      threatened to overshadow the opening of a Labor Party convention.

    2. The top spot on Mr. Blackwell's list of the worst-dressed women
      has gone to Linda Tripp. She has a look that makes her the « Starr» of her
      very own
      «Stylegate,)) the former fashion director said.




    1. Labour accused Mr. King of blatant electioneering as he placed
      the crucial order for short range air-to-air missiles. Labour defence
      spokesman said: «It will come as a relief to the work force of those com­
      panies. Whether it will come as a relief to the Conservative candidates in
      those seats, it will remain to the election day to find out.»

    2. Another example of infortainment is docudrama, where real
      events are dramatised and reenacted by actors.

    3. The authors of the housing association report stress that their
      guidelines are not about ghettoisation or segregation, but are intended to
      promote intergration of minority cultures into mainstream Britain.

    56.[ Mr.Bauer's think-tank was created by James Dobson, a pluto­cratic televangelist; not surprisingly he maintains that Republican policies should rest on religious conservatism.

    1. Mr.Gate's presence threw Hong Kong into a technotizzy as the
      government announced a lot of Singapore rivalling projects, from a $1.6
      billion «cyberport» to efforts to make Hong Kong the region's e-
      commerce hub.

    2. The drift towards virtue, along with a new code of conduct for
      Eurocrats published this week, is welcome.

    3. «Eurospeak is a separate in-house language, full of jargon, acro­
      nyms, abstractions — and a lot of it is gobbledygook», — said a British
      translator. He and others have begun a drive called «Fight the Fog» to
      prod officials into producing clear sentences.»

    60) American Eurosceptics accuse the European allies of being free riders on American-provided security.

    1. Just as European anti-Americanism damaged Western solidarity
      during the Cold War, so American Eurobashing threatens to unravel
      Transatlantic cooperation in the post-Cold War era.

    2. The President will do almost anything to get the press cameras
      lined up in the White House for pictures of him bringing two bitter adver­
      saries together [Israel and PLO]. He needs a foreign policy success or,
      more to the point, something that looks like a success. We have come to
      call this «photo-op diplomacy.»

    3. Photo-op diplomacy lacks an important ingredient — credibility.

    4. Clinton's defenders have transformed the Washington version of
      truth — telling into a subtle new form and demonstrated, for any who
      might have forgotten, how easy it is to manipulate the press — and, ulti­
      mately, the public.

    The latest peek at the tricks of the trade comes from Lanny Davis, a former White House lawyer and one of Clinton's chief spin doctors dur-


    152

    153

    ing the 1997 congressional inquiries into alleged campaign fund-raising abuses.

    1. Another device for ensuring that bad news got a good spin was
      what Davis calls «deep-background private placement» : telling tales to a
      hand-picked reporter or news organization.

    2. Davis admits that all the spin had limited effect. «There is no way
      to spin the public away from the presumption of guilt when a public offi­
      cial is accused of scandal,» Davis tells US News.


    3. Sometimes the world of spin is more than an inside-the-beltway
      game.

    4. Through his refusal to follow the diktats of the spin-doctors and
      public relations consultants who dominate White Hall and Westminster
      when Parliament is in session, the Deputy Prime Minister has transformed
      his own image for the better.


    (my All the spin-doctoring in the world will not preserve the Govern­ment's present popularity.

    (ж) Something odd is happening to political correctness (speech code). On the one hand it is thriving. On the other hand its opponents are thriving too.

    1. Some dismiss (the language of) political correctness (PC) as an ir­
      relevance hyped up by the right; others see it as a leftist danger to the very
      fabric of American life; still others argue that it is plain passe. Is America
      in the throes of new-PC, anti-PC or post PC? It is hard to tell.


    2. Few diseases have been as politicised as AIDS. And in few other
      cases is political correctness such a danger to the disease's victims.

    3. Single-issue activists, incensed by human wrongs in Burma or re­
      ligious persecution in Tibet, increasingly drive American foreign policy.

    4. Both single-issue activism and the casual treatment of allies can
      hurt America. The single-issue crowd fails to consider the cost to Amer­
      ica of taking sanctions against each injustice that it cares about.

    75 Less welcome is the harsh political fact that pragmatists have trou­ble building constituencies, especially in this era of single-issue politics.

    ^6^Cellular phones are perhaps one of the most user-friendly devices modern technology has devised. However, can you imagine the potential stored within?

    1. In general, the regional parties [in India] are investor-friendly.

    2. While it is only realistic to acknowledge that devolution could «go
      wrong,» the reality is that the new parliaments in Scotland and Wales are
      more likely to invigorate Britain than enfeeble it. In different ways, the
      English, the Scots, the Welsh and the British as a whole stand to benefit
      from devolution.

    154

    (79) «Renault» and «Nissan» = Renissant? Pushing together «Re-nautr>> and «Nissan» does not quite spell renaissance. Yet, that is what both car firms now seek.

    1. (The new (mobile-phone) company, to be called Vodafone Air
      Touch PLC... aims to become the * Coca-Cola» of global wireless com­
      munication — the main brand recognized by consumers world-wide.

    2. One of Britain's leading directors yesterday expressed despair at
      being told unofficially by the Art Council that «there is sufficient serious
      theatre in London. He said that the council's attitude was symptomatic of
      the Government's populist and narrow-minded approach — a
      « McDonald's culture.»

    &2.)<.<.Escapism» is a word that tends to pop up frequently in discus­sions with students and faculty members.

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