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Glossary Search Tips*

Most sites for translators give lists of glossaries; there are many on this site as well. How do you find your own glossary, on a certain topic - with just the term you need?

Follow these steps to find:

  1. a glossary in a specific field
  2. a term in a glossary
  3. a bilingual glossary in a specific field
  4. a term in a bilingual glossary

To find a glossary in a specific field:

+field +glossary

Use the word for glossary in the same language as the field.


To find a term in a glossary:

+term +glossary

Use the word for glossary in the language of the term to find the definition of the term in that language.


To find a bilingual glossary in a specific field:

+field +glossary +source_language +target_language

Example: To find a finance glossary in French and English, the query would be:

+finance +glossary +english +french

or

+finance +glossary +english +français

  • The combination of english, anglais, french, or français is irrelevant - combine at will.
  • Use the word for glossary in either language.

To find a term in a bilingual glossary:

+term +glossary +source_language +target_language

Example: To find the word "underwriter" in French and English, the query would be:

+underwriter +glossary +english +french

or

+underwriter +glossary +english +français

  • The combination of english, anglais, french, or français is irrelevant - combine at will.
  • Use the word for glossary in either language.

Use Alta Vista to search for terminology on a page that has been translated. Search for a word in the source language, and add the target language to the query, with the goal of finding a page with a button to click leading to the identical page in the second language. In the following example, if the translation gods are willing, there will be a button to click on the page leading to its equivalent in the second language; if not, the word "English" will be referred to somewhere on the page.


Example:

+årsredovisning +english

Try searching for a word in the source language on a page in the target language, with an explanation or translation.


Example:

Search for the following word, with the language set to French; you will find a page in French with the proper terminology for the word "riksdag," which is written in parentheses.

+riksdag

Verify the source to ensure reliability.

Many words have the same roots in different languages; this lets you use the search engine's truncation feature to "translate". Enter the beginning of a word and end it with *; Alta Vista will search for all words that start with those letters. For example, truncate the Swedish word silanisera by searching for silani* in English. Add a word which will keep the results in the right field (in this case, the topic was dental implants and the search was qualified with +implant). One of the hits was for silanization. Verify the results by searching for +silanization +dental in English to confirm that usage is correct.


Example:

+silani* +implant

Search for the term in English; and there is the answer: silanization. Verify the results by searching for the English term to ensure that it is used properly by the right native speakers.

Use the search engine to verify that a term is actually used by a certain group. For example, to check whether a word is used in British English, search by "host."


Example:

host:uk ombudsperson

host:uk ombudsman

Run these two searches to find out which is more common in British English; the results:

  • Ombudsperson - 30
  • Ombudsman - 3615 !!

Change the language in the URL. Search for a word on a page, and if there is an indication in the URL that the page is in one language and might be in others, replace the letters indicating the language.


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Example:

Use the EU search engine to search for the word områdespakt.

http://europa.eu.int/en/record/europact/sv/chap4.html

Change the /sv/ to /en/ and there is the translated page.

http://europa.eu.int/en/record/europact/en/chap4.html

This works with EU documents, or with bilingual English and French documents from the Canadian government .

*Tips based on the workshop, "Stumped? The answer may be on the Net... somewhere"