Here’s a site for the U.S. military on how to get married in Germany, Denmark and Switzerland. I presume it dates back to the times when more Americans were here. I remember the Danes offered a weekend marriage package, included in which I believe were translations at lower cost than in Germany. (I’m not sure where Switzerland fits in – oh, I see, U.S. NATO personnel in Basel, as they call it). The materials include the apostille text.
Monthly Archives: January 2004
British trucker wins Greek appeal?
According to BBC news, ‘British trucker wins appeal’. Pardon? Well, the story itself does return to British vocabulary:
bq. A lorry driver who faced 11 years in jail for smuggling illegal immigrants into Greece has won his appeal.
It reminds me of a letter to the Times when British Airways was given its name (what was it called before?). I think it went something like:
bq. Sir,
British Airways?
Harold Shipman found hanged in cell
Harald Shipman has committed suicide in prison (so did Fred West). Here is a BBC profile. He had 15 (concurrent) life sentences for murder, but he is thought to have murdered more like 215 people.
LATER NOTE: I think the German TV news report I saw (ARD) got it wrong in saying ‘mehrere lebenslängliche Freiheitsstrafen’ (several terms of life imprisonment), because that sounds like the U.S. system of consecutive life sentences. Under the English system, the sentences are concurrent; the more there are, the less likely the defendant is to get out of prison early.
British Academy Portal and LTSN language network
Mark Liberman of Language Log gives two interesting links.
One is the British Academy Portal. I probably ought to know what the British Academy is. Anyway, it has a good page of law links. That leads inter alia to an employment law portal I didn’t know.
The other link is to the LTSN language network, which has links relating to languages, linguistics, and area studies – well, the area studies link doesn’t seem to work yet, but the other two do. I found an FAQ on Why study linguistics? which I thought was interesting – well, I did Old High German instead of linguistics at London University and I sometimes feel like filling the gap.
Article on stylometry
In Science News Online, there is an article (of December 2003) on stylometry called Bookish Math – Statistical tests are unraveling knotty literary mysteries. Thanks to Gary Muldoon of the Forensic Linguistics mailing list for the link. Stylometry is ‘the science of measuring literary style’. The article describes methods in some detail.
bq. At first glance, it might appear that the way to pinpoint a writer’s style is to study the rarest, most striking features of his or her writing. After all, it’s the unexpected words and the unusual rhetorical flourishes that seem to mark a work as uniquely Shakespearean or Dickensian.
bq. Yet the most venerable, commonly used approach of stylometrists does the opposite: It examines how writers use bread-and-butter words such as “to” and “with.” Although this approach seems counterintuitive, it’s based on sound logic.
For example, when some of the Federalist Papers were analyzed to discover whether they were written by Alexander Hamilton or James Madison, both of whom claimed authorship, about thirty rules were used, such as a rule that Hamilton used the word ‘upon’ about ten times as often as Madison did. This kind of thing is harder to copy than unusual vocabulary. This particular study was done in the early 1960s, and stylometry has greatly developed since then.
A later technique called principle-components analysis (PCA) is described in detail with illustrations of diagrams. It showed that The Royal Book of Oz was not written by Frank L. Baum. There is more, including something about neural networks (which I don’t really understand).
The article has further links, a bibliography, and a list of sources.
Translator and interpreter in Iraq branded coward
Yet another translator/interpreter is in the news. The Independent writes that Georg-Andreas Pogany has been branded a coward, just as Jessica Lynch was branded a hero. Instead of being sent back for active duty after recovering from stress, he was pilloried by his commanding officer.
According to the Denver Post:
bq. Just when he felt he was recovering, a commander berated him in front of lower-ranking soldiers, telling him “what a (expletive) bag I am and what a (expletive) coward I am,” Pogany said.
The Independent quotes the Denver Post slightly more fully:
bq. According to an account Sgt Pogany gave recently to the Denver Post newspaper, he had begun to implement the army psychologist’s advice and was feeling much better when his commanding officer took the drastic action of branding him a coward. In front of a group of lower-ranking soldiers, the commander told him “what a shit bag I am and what a fucking coward I am”.