Saturday, September 28, 2013

Translation and Transliteration


Transliteration means transferring the letters or characters (of a word) from one alphabet to another. Translation, on the other hand, means substituting for a word (or series of words) in one language, a second word (or series of words) from another language which most closely approximates the meaning of the first word (or series of words).

2 comments:

  1. In the past , people who were forcibly held in them used to be a tourist attraction for everything.
    Human zoos began to appear in the world, the phenomenon intensifying with the period of the explorers.
    The same explorers would capture children from the countries they visited and bring them as a gift to the authorities of their country of origin.
    This phenomenon of human trafficking, in Asian countries, took a stage, in the form of children's villages where black and Native Americans, of any age, were held captive for display purposes.
    One of the most famous women held in captivity was Sarah Bartman - a black woman born in South Africa who suffered from a rare disease that caused unusual fat accumulation.
    In 1809, when she was 20, she was abducted in Africa and brought to Europe, where she was held by a British doctor and used for freak shows in the United Kingdom and France for four years. After four years, when the shows she attended lost their popularity, after which they tried to release her but failed. After a while, she was released from captivity when she was destitute, after about a year, she died
    Human zoos still exist in quite a few places in the form of "indigenous villages." One of tourist attraction in the north of the country.

    ReplyDelete
  2. In the past , people who were forcibly held in them used to be a tourist attraction for everything.
    Human zoos began to appear in the world, the phenomenon intensifying with the period of the explorers.
    The same explorers would capture children from the countries they visited and bring them as a gift to the authorities of their country of origin.
    This phenomenon of human trafficking, in Asian countries, took a stage, in the form of children's villages where black and Native Americans, of any age, were held captive for display purposes.
    One of the most famous women held in captivity was Sarah Bartman - a black woman born in South Africa who suffered from a rare disease that caused unusual fat accumulation.
    In 1809, when she was 20, she was abducted in Africa and brought to Europe, where she was held by a British doctor and used for freak shows in the United Kingdom and France for four years. After four years, when the shows she attended lost their popularity, after which they tried to release her but failed. After a while, she was released from captivity when she was destitute, after about a year, she died
    Human zoos still exist in quite a few places in the form of "indigenous villages." One of tourist attraction in the north of the country.

    ReplyDelete