Poll: Does working as a translator or interpreter run in your family? Лице кое објавува дискусија: ProZ.com Staff
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This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Does working as a translator or interpreter run in your family?".
This poll was originally submitted by tilak raj. View the poll results »
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| No change... | Jul 12, 2015 |
... since the last time this question was asked, so I'll reproduce the answer I gave 2 years ago:
As far as I know (I come from a very large extended family), I'm the first full-time translator in the family, but I'm starting a family tradition as one of my daughters is also a translato... See more ... since the last time this question was asked, so I'll reproduce the answer I gave 2 years ago:
As far as I know (I come from a very large extended family), I'm the first full-time translator in the family, but I'm starting a family tradition as one of my daughters is also a translator…
PS. Here we go again: http://www.proz.com/forum/poll_discussion/102871-poll:_does_translation_interpretation_run_in_the_family.html ▲ Collapse | | | |
EvaVer (X) Local time: 01:49 чешки на француски + ... | Well, run... | Jul 12, 2015 |
I am the second generation, and it stops here, as I have no children. No translators or interpreters in my wider family, although I am told that a second great-aunt used to be a guide working in foreign languages. | | | |
Sheila Wilson Шпанија Local time: 00:49 Член (2007) англиски + ... | No and I haven't started a tradition | Jul 12, 2015 |
My son is totally bilingual (has lived in France most of his life) and my daughter studied French right through to an engineering with French degree. But neither of them has any interest in translating as a living. | | |
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not before me, but my daughter grew up with 3 languages and now they are part of her job. | | | |
| It started with me | Jul 12, 2015 |
I inherited the bug for languages from my aunts, but they were teachers at school and university.
I started teaching EFL and found it wasn't my scene, but the school also offered a translation service .... and the rest is history.
My son and his wife are carrying on the tradition, my daughter wants nothing to do with it but, as she has graduated in medicine, she helps me out now and then. Last week she did a five-page medical report in a couple of hours, it would have taken m... See more I inherited the bug for languages from my aunts, but they were teachers at school and university.
I started teaching EFL and found it wasn't my scene, but the school also offered a translation service .... and the rest is history.
My son and his wife are carrying on the tradition, my daughter wants nothing to do with it but, as she has graduated in medicine, she helps me out now and then. Last week she did a five-page medical report in a couple of hours, it would have taken me MUCH longer ... all I had to do was check it afterwards. ▲ Collapse | | | |
When I told my family that I want a career in languages, the response that I got was "you will be starving"
Well, I now have 3 meals/day plus 2 snacks and some buffet in between | | | |
Triston Goodwin Соединети Американски Држави Local time: 17:49 шпански на англиски + ...
My mother was an ASL interpreter during her college years. | | |
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tilak raj Индија Local time: 05:19 Член (2012) англиски на панјаби + ... |
Leah Hunt Обединето Кралство Local time: 00:49 германски на англиски + ...
My Mum worked as a translator for an insurance firm for about 3 weeks before leaving to work at the local paper. If she hadn't, I wouldn't be here carrying on the "tradition" because that's where she met my Dad. | | | |
Mario Freitas Бразил Local time: 20:49 англиски на португалски + ...
I was the first one in 107 generations.
Now, I'm trying to get my son into it, but he only considers it as an extra, not as a carreer. | | | |