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


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    § 15. ИНТЕРНАЦИОНАЛЬНАЯ

    И ПСЕВДОИНТЕРНАЦИОНАЛЬНАЯ

    ЛЕКСИКА. «ЛОЖНЫЕ ДРУЗЬЯ

    ПЕРЕВОДЧИКА»

    В современных словарях английского и русского языков есть чрезвычайно большое число сходных по форме и звучанию слов, а в последние десятилетия объем такой лексики увеличился. Можно на­звать десятки английских слов, вошедших в русский язык: atlas, football, progress leader, diplomacy process, tendency и т.д. Однако да­же среди безусловно интернациональных слов можно отметить раз­ницу в их употреблении в английском и русском языках (что не от­носится к терминам). Так, progress — не только прогресс, но и ус­пехи, достижения, развитие; leader — не только лидер, но и руко­водитель, глава (делегации) и т.п. При переводе выбор нужного эк­вивалента определяется жанром переводимого текста, сочетаемо­стью слов в русском языке и другими факторами.

    Для переводчиков хорошо известна «легкость» перевода интер­национальной лексики.

    1. Прежде всего, это так называемые «ложные друзья» перево­дчика, т.е. слова, схожие с русскими словами по фонетической или/и графической форме, но имеющие совершенно иное значение. На­пример:

    prospect

    перспектива(а не проспект) 155

    magazine actual

    decade

    momentous

    accurate

    technique

    advocate

    aspirant

    complexion


    nuclear weapons democracies

    difference

    differences

    development

    developments
    журнал (а не магазин) действительный {а не актуальный) десятилетие (а не декада) важный (а не моментальный) точный (а не аккуратный) способ, метод (а не техника) сторонник (а не адвокат) претендент, кандидат(а не аспирант) цвет лица (а не комплекция)

    Список «ложных друзей» приводится в учебниках по переводу, а также в некоторых словарях, например: Cambridge International Dictionary of English.

    2. Большую трудность чем собственно «ложные друзья» перево­дчика представляют многозначные английские слова, одно из зна­чений которых вошло в русский язык, причем, нередко не самое частотное (см. § 10 Многозначные слова). Например:

    венном числе industries может означать отрасли промышленности или промышленность (ряда стран); policies политика, политический курс (ряда стран или в разных областях), например: foreign and do­mestic policies of the new government — внешняя и внутренняя поли­тика нового правительства.

    ядерное оружие демократические государства

    Некоторые существительные в английском языке во множест­венном числе приобретают новые значения. Например:

    разница, различие

    1) различия: 2) разногласия

    1) развитие; 2) участок, подлежащий

    освоению; 3) микрорайон; 4) тенденция.

    события



    nation partisan

    control v.
    нация, народ, государство

    meeting dramatic

    realize record argument

    сторонник, приверженец, фанатик, партизан (редк.); партийный, необъективный, предвзятый руководить, управлять, распоряжаться, владеть, контролировать, иметь большинство (в палате парламента)

    собрание, заседание, митинг; встреча; дуэль драматичный; драматический; яркий, неожидан­ный, впечатляющий, важный выполнять, реализовать; представлять себе, осо­знавать

    запись, летопись; учет, регистрация, данные, характеристика, протокол, рекорд, позиция довод, аргумент; спор.

    Примечание. Эти слова могут иметь и другие оттенки значения и в зависимости от контекста переводиться иначе.

    3. Причиной ошибок при переводе может быть грамматическое несовпадение схожих английских и русских слов. Так, ряд существительных в английском языке употребляется в единственном и множественном числе, а в русском — только в единственном. (Например, economy, policy, industry). Во множест-

    Проанализируйте и переведите следующие предложения.

    l.)The heaviest blow that the atom bomb fanatics got, however, came with the dramatic announcement that the Russians also have got the bomb.

    T. As they participate in the fight for dramatic reforms large sections of the population come to realize the necessity of unity of action and to become more active, politically.

    1. The Administration, of course, is loath to contemplate such a fun­
      damental change in its foreign policy. The stakes are too high and Ameri­
      can bonds with Europe too numerous to permit such a
      dramatic situation.

    2. The Prime Minister's dramatic European move was timed to divert
      pubh'c attention from the more dismal news of the freeze.

    ^)There is a popular tendency, among most newsmen and radio and TV commentators, to portray Congressmen as men who are working themselves to death, sweating and suffering heart attacks to serve the people.

    (^He seems to have excluded himself from the vice-presidential can­didacy at a time when the public opinion polls report that he is more popular than both the President and the Vice-president.

    1. The victory of the popular revolution in Cuba has become a splen­
      did example for the peoples of Latin America.

    2. The President of Brazil made himself very popular when he killed


    156

    157

    hyperinflation and gave his country a solid currency. But he didn't follow through by reforming government itself.

    /9T)This year the election falls on November 3. The outcome is gener­ally known the next morning, though formally the balloting takes place in the Electoral College in early December.

    /Ш) The Prime Minister will reply to the speeches on Monday, after informal talks last night, this evening and tomorrow with the Common­wealth Prime Ministers, who have been invited in three groups.

    1. Some right of privacy, however qualified, has been a major differ­
      ence between democracies and dictatorships.

    2. We must fortify the international system by helping transitional or
      otherwise troubled states become full participants. This is essential to
      maintain the momentum of democracy's recent advances.

    (U) In foreign policy political democracies may be isolationist, inter­nationalist, or imperialist.

    14. A country whose people are willing to march out into the world, and if necessary to die there, is a likelier candidate for great-power rank than one whose people do not feel that way; and the difference matters even more between two democracies than it does between two dictator­ships, because in a democracy people's wishes count for more.

    (T5) This policy will ensure that successive currency crises do not af­fect the level of economic activity and overall welfare of the nation.

    16. The meeting expressed the hope that the remaining points of dif­ferences would be settled when the conference is resumed in Geneva.

    (yf) The main item on the agenda, and one over which most differences exisif was the proposed agreement.

    18. A conspiracy is being brewed in Wall Street and Washington to deny the people any choice in the Presidential elections. The tactic is to suppress the issues and blur any differences between the Republican and Democratic candidates.

    ;19JA general strike is one which affects an entire industry, an entire locality or a whole country.

    (2

    07)Disarmament will release for civilian employment millions of people now serving in the armed forces and war industries,

    (2K)This fact is recognition of the weight and power of public opinion, of its growing influence on international developments.

    1. The State Secretary was reported to be dispirited by the outcome
      of the day's developments and waiting to see what would be done to
      shore up his authority.

    2. Such development would emphasize the region's economic im­
      portance and growth potential which would be reflected in its population
      growth, housing and overspill problems.

    рPrime Minister said that the Government was prepared to set up publicly owned enterprises in the development areas.

    25.) In a strategic sense, the Norwegian approach if pressed further, appears to be a development that could lead toward dividing Europe from the United States.

    1. Already very many sections of the Labour, trade union and coop­
      erative movements support policies on these lines. Their members num­
      ber millions.

    2. To get the kind of Budget the country needs means a fight for a
      different policy within the Labour movement.

    (Ж] American politics is passing through a highly unusual phase. In a country where local issues usually dominate voting patterns, foreign pol­icy has surprisingly emerged as the defining issue of the current political debate.

    1. Mrs. Robinson admits she is not a natural politician in the Irish
      sense: she lacks the glad-handing skills so valued in the small world of
      Irish politics.

    2. Aides billed the president's speech to California business and
      policy leaders as a major address laying out his goals for the remainder of
      his term.

    3. In the fluid world of Middle Eastern politics, the Iraqi Kurds, de­
      spite massacres and betrayals, still maintain lines of communication with
      the President.

    4. But even if conservatives triumph, those involved in the contest
      say the energy of street-level politics, and the sense among Iranians that
      the election is providing them with a genuine voice in local
      government,
      can only speed the process of liberalization.

    5. Nothing would do more to protect American security in the dec­
      ades ahead than ensuring that Russia's immense stockpile of nuclear
      weapons and materials is diminished and adequately controlled.

    (34.)The next decade or two may bring specific threats from specific Muslim countries, such as a nuclear-armed Iran or Algeria; but there is no sign yet of a shoulder-to-shoulder Islam.

    35. It can certainly be said that lax management, waste and worse havebeen part and parcel of Brussels programmes for decades.

    (Зб)Мо particular fan of an American model, Mr. Pfister describes the investigation of the US President by an independent counsel as partisan, inspired by the right wing of the Republican Party, and using inquisition — like methods.

    37. It is surely chauvinistic to identify the West with America and


    158

    159

    Britain alone, and partisan to attribute its slow triumph to one favoured thread of an ever complicated politics.

    1. No mean partisan Representative, Tom Campell, Republican of
      California, has joined with Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of
      Massachusetts, to gather some 40 congressmen to demand on constitu­
      tional grounds that the president obtain authority from Congress before
      taking military action against a country [Yugoslavia].

    2. A full warning [of nuclear blackmail] came from the report of the
      commission on missile threats. This was a bipartisan commission, with
      members who have often disagreed on weapons issues.

    3. Under a compromise already reached by the Environment Minis­
      ter,
      a Greens lawmaker, and the Economics Minister, a non-partisan en­
      ergy expert, the ban (of sending spent fuel out of Germany for reprocess­
      ing) will not take effect until a year after passage.

    4. Years of partisan wrangling over the US deficit, taxation, foreign
      aid and contributions to international organizations have created a con­
      sensus that Americans cannot pay more and resentment that the European
      allies appear to be paying less.


    .42 Л The Iraqi Kurds may be running their affairs autonomously for now, but all know how devastating the disciplined Iraqi armored units can be against their lightly armed guerrillas.

    43. The report said the Mayan population in Guatemala paid the high­
    est price, when the military identified them as natural allies of the guer­
    rillas.

    44. Whether a second chamber should be elected or nominated, with
    regions or special interests represented, is getting decision the wrong way
    round.

    1. The death of about 500 people in an explosion in South-Eastern
      Nigeria is being blamed on the sabotage of a fuel pipeline: saboteurs
      breached it last week.

    2. Tired of corruption and crime in the state (Maharashtra, India),
      voters, with some help from a few honest bureaucrats, are starting to dis­
      own bad government.


    ■ 47. Few among her admirers would call her a natural bureaucrat, or a natural diplomat, or a good «details» person — all of which a European commissioner needs to be.

    48. In recent years in particular, an emboldened class of investigating magistrates has made unprecedented progress in investigating public offi­cials suspected of abusing their position.

    49yln the Balkans and elsewhere, we are supporting the advocates of moderation and tolerance against the ruthless exploiters of ethnic hatred.

    50. Americans must exert themselves not only to listen more carefully
    to European concerns but also to convey them accurately to political
    opinion makers in the USA.

    1. Domestic law enforcement has many techniques for gathering
      data, including lawful wiretaps and grand jury investigations.

    2. Many of the most internationalist of administration officials feed
      rather than combat congressional resentment [over the European allies].

    3. The war in Kosovo is a reminder of the split between interven­
      tionists, such as Mr. McCain, and isolationists, such as Pat Buchanan, a
      fire-breathing presidential aspirant who says that the United States should
      never have got involved in the Balkans in the first place.


    54^ The offenders were told, that the Police Department would use all its legal powers against them unless the killings stopped.

    55. The new model was brought to Barclay, which is a public school. It means lots of homework, a gruelling workload of spelling tests, rigor­ous instruction in math and science, and steady infusion of world history, literature and art to ensure that the children become ({culturally literate.»

    /5б)Calvert is an exclusive private school in Baltimore, with an over­whelmingly white, middle-class student body and an outstanding aca­demic reputation.

    1. The traditional curriculum, such as it was, virtually disintegrated
      during the campus upheavals of the 1960s, when millions of students de­
      manded and won the right to get academic credit for studying whatever
      they pleased.

    2. Direct democracy obliterates the distinction between government
      and the governed, it is a system of popular self-government.

    3. With American unemployment at record post-war low and the
      economy steaming ahead, industries such as steel and memory chips have
      resorted to anti-dumping suits to protect themselves against imports.


    4. Mr. Howard is relying on the minutes of a meeting held on January
      10th at the Home office to support his claim that he did not mislead MPs.

    5. If the Prime minister is to win the referendum he plans to call soon
      after the next election, he needs the European project to continue to con­
      vey an impression of remorseless forward momentum... What, though, if
      the momentum stalls, or seems to?

    160

    Часть II

    П РЕДЛОЖЕНИЯ ДЛЯ ПЕРЕВОДА НА СМЕШАННЫЕ ТРУДНОСТИ

    1. Сделайте синтаксический и грамматический анализ сле­дующих предложений и переведите их, обращая внимание на перевод различных функций инфинитива, герундия и причастия.

    1. But just when they need time to work through their promising changes and help from the United States in completing them the Euro­pean allies risk running into political static in Washington because of U.S. wishes to recast NATO in a role approximating a global policeman — a fu­turistic vision of the alliance that European policymakers see as pr a-ture now, and perhaps forever.

    1. The European Commission argues that «unfair tax competition»
      among EU countries distorts the single market — by allowing low-tax
      countries, or heavens, to attract capital from high-tax jurisdictions —
      and indirectly contributes to Europe's high unemployment rates by shift­
      ing taxation from capital to labour.

    2. Europe seemed to find its footing in NATO's post Cold-war pos­
      ture, finally making a promising start on European military cooperation
      demonstrating a new readiness to use force and pulling down barriers to con­
      solidating its national defence companies into Europe - wide industries.

    3. «Truths!» Charles de Gaulle is supposed to have shouted. «Did
      you think I could have created a [Free French] government against the
      English and the Americans with truths? You make History with ambition,
      not with truths»
      .

    4. Taken with the smooth closure this year of alliance enlargement to
      include new members from Central Europe, there seems to be much to
      celebrate next year when Washington hosts ceremonies marking the anni­
      versary of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.


    5. If the Parliament insists on pushing through a policy forged in the
      heat of an election campaign rather than out of the calm consideration and
      consultation that the Parliament's committee structure is supposed to en­
      courage, ministers in London will have to accept the anomaly or follow suit.

    162

    7. Attempts to strengthen common foreign and security policy, the EU's
    «second pillar», by importing majority voting or incorporating the Western
    European Union, Europe's defence club, into the EU, look like failing.

    The biggest changes are likely to come in the «third pillar»: justice and home affairs.

    1. Considered on the fringes of legality because of its liberal views,
      the Freedom Movement (of Iran) has been allowed to field four candi­
      dates for the 15 municipal council seats in Tehran.

    2. Built-in encryption also could make it easier to add access controls
      to PC's and routinely scramble all stored data, making it harder to steal
      computer resources or files.




    1. The deal struck by European Union governments at their Berlin
      summit leaves both their budget and their enlargement plans in a worse
      state than before.

    2. «The Brazilian government move highlights the difficulty of im­
      plementing a deep belt-tightening in a country in which more than 40 percent
      of the population live in poverty», — said an analyst in New York.


    3. In remarks focusing heavily on his so-called new Labour govern­
      ment policy — which seeks to marry social justice and workers' rights
      with a pro-business market-oriented economic policy — Mr. Blair
      heaped praise on South Africa.

    4. Thousands of people rampaged Friday through the town, hurling
      stones at police stations and looting shops. Police fired plastic bullets at
      the mobs, killing at least one person and wounding nine.

    5. «Boston college has wronged me and my students by caving into
      right-wing pressure and depriving me of my right to teach freely and de­
      priving them of the opportunity to study with me,» said Mary Daly, 70,
      an associate professor of the college in a telephone interview.

    6. No sooner had the European Commission resigned than the Prime
      Minister popped up in the House of Commons to tell MPs that this was
      no setback but a golden opportunity to push through «root and branch»
      reform of a Commission whose failings had been tolerated for far too
      long. Stretching a point, he boasted that it was his lot that had brought the
      Commission down.





    1. The vice-president began by allaying fears that he would burden
      business with a green and heavy hand: government has its place as long
      as government knows its place, he said, adding that slump in the devel­
      oping world makes growth a top priority for governments.

    2. Until then [1918] the infant Labour party had been the junior of
      the Liberals, helping them to win their landslide victory of 1906 and to
      enact a sweeping programme of social, and constitutional reform in great
      part inspired and led by Lloyd George.

    163

    1. These universities (Oxford and Cambridge) were rural rather than
      urban, and therefore residential, they took a collegiate form. Their func­
      tion was not only to train the young for the professions, but to preserve
      the heritage of the past and transmit it to succeeding generations and to
      prepare them morally as well as intellectually for the larger duties of gov­
      ernment and society.


    2. Boeing executives suspect commission officials of passing on in­
      side information about airline contracts to airbus officials in Toulouse.
      For that reason the Seattle company has been rather vague in some of its
      answers to the commission's requests for information, while formally co­
      operating with its inquiry.

    The commission is making a habit of interfering with firms from out­side the EU when it thinks that competition is likely to be lessened.

    1. Germany has complained strongly to Washington about restric­
      tions facing foreign companies seeking to enter the US telecommunica­
      tions market. Germany's finance minister expressed concern at the dis­
      cretionary powers of the Federal Communications Commission to restrict
      access which, he said, could result in foreign companies being denied access
      to the US market «for general foreign policy or trade policy reasons.»

    2. A college education is often a collection of courses without any
      connecting fiber. Yet decision-making is a function of being able to inte­
      grate what seems like unrelated variables, and understanding the balar ■
      between analytical and intuitive skills. Without knowing these variables,
      it is impossible to determine what information is needed, know how and
      where to get the information and select the information that is pertinent.

    3. In facing up to the dangers, and living up to the importance of his
      task, President Kim [of South Korea] has made a good start. But to un­
      derstand that start, and to get the measure of what is required of him in
      future, it is vital to ditch the idea that he is a «left-winger» who is be­
      coming, or has to become, a convert to free-market ideas once anathema
      to him. That is so partly because such labels are everywhere much less
      helpful than they were, but partly, also because in South Korea's circum­
      stances (and Mr. Kim's) they are especially misleading.


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