undertranslate

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

under- +‎ translate

Verb[edit]

undertranslate (third-person singular simple present undertranslates, present participle undertranslating, simple past and past participle undertranslated)

  1. To translate (language) in insufficient detail, or failing to translate certain elements.
    • 1991, Peter Newmark, About Translation, Multilingual Matters, →ISBN, page 104:
      Secondly, there is a tendency to undertranslate, viz. to normalise by generalising, to understate, in all translation but particularly in literary translation.
    • 2017, Geraldine Brodie, Adapting Translation for the Stage, Taylor & Francis, →ISBN, page 45:
      Only Borell and Adam undertranslate this opener as "What brings you here, Adler?"
    • 2019, David R. Miller, Greek Pedagogy in Crisis: A Pedagogical Analysis and Assessment of New Testament Greek in Twenty-First-Century Theological Education, Wipf and Stock Publishers, →ISBN, page 185:
      I was told specifically that they were going to undertranslate differences between, say, present and aorist infinitives, because there was no agreement on how to handle the differences.