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Note-taking for consecutive interpreting : a short course / Andrew Gillies.

By: Material type: TextSeries: Translation practices explained ; 8Publisher: London ; New York : Routledge, 2014Description: 239 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1900650827
  • 9781900650823
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 418.02 GIL 22
Contents:
The basics step-by-step -- Speech analysis -- Recognizing and splitting ideas -- The beginning of notes -- Links -- Moving on -- Verticality and hierarchies of values -- Symbols -- Memory prompts -- What to note -- Fine-tuning -- Clauses -- Rules of abbreviation -- Verbs -- The recall line -- Uses of the margin -- Implicit links -- Pro-forms -- Noting sooner, or later -- How you write it -- More on symbols -- Things you didn't catch -- The end -- The back of the book -- Notes with commentary -- Versions of the tasks set -- The examples -- Where to find practice material.
Summary: This is a book which can be read at one sitting, but is designed to be workded through over a number of months. Each chapter presents a technique, together with examples, tasks and exercises for the reader to complete -- true to the motto "learning by doing". The book uses English throughout, explaining how and where to locate material for other languages. It thus constitutes a course which offers student interpreters in any language combination a sound and adaptable base on which to build as they develop their skills. It will also be a valuable resource for interpreter trainers looking for innovative ways of approaching this core element of interpreter competence. This is the sort of book that many people have been waiting for: trainers, students and interpreters alike. It is stimulating, interactive and full of novel ideas about how to improve note-taking techniques, working alone or in a group and with a minimum infrastructure. It is also easy to read and work through. -- Anne Martin, interpreter and interpreter trainer, University of Granada, Spain.
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Holdings
Cover image Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Vol info URL Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds Item hold queue priority Course reserves
Book - Borrowing Central Library Second Floor Baccah 418.02 GIL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 25868 Available 000033112
NB - Book (Non borrowing) Central Library Second Floor Baccah 418.02 GIL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 26103 Not for loan 000033472
Total holds: 0

First published: Manchester : St. Jerome Publishing, 2005.

Includes glossary.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The basics step-by-step -- Speech analysis -- Recognizing and splitting ideas -- The beginning of notes -- Links -- Moving on --
Verticality and hierarchies of values -- Symbols -- Memory prompts -- What to note -- Fine-tuning -- Clauses -- Rules of abbreviation -- Verbs -- The recall line -- Uses of the margin --
Implicit links -- Pro-forms -- Noting sooner, or later -- How you write it -- More on symbols -- Things you didn't catch -- The end -- The back of the book -- Notes with commentary -- Versions of the tasks set -- The examples -- Where to find practice material.

This is a book which can be read at one sitting, but is designed to be workded through over a number of months. Each chapter presents a technique, together with examples, tasks and exercises for the reader to complete -- true to the motto "learning by doing". The book uses English throughout, explaining how and where to locate material for other languages. It thus constitutes a course which offers student interpreters in any language combination a sound and adaptable base on which to build as they develop their skills. It will also be a valuable resource for interpreter trainers looking for innovative ways of approaching this core element of interpreter competence. This is the sort of book that many people have been waiting for: trainers, students and interpreters alike. It is stimulating, interactive and full of novel ideas about how to improve note-taking techniques, working alone or in a group and with a minimum infrastructure. It is also easy to read and work through. -- Anne Martin, interpreter and interpreter trainer, University of Granada, Spain.

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