Facebook上人名阿拉伯-英语音译中的拼字错误

Reima Al-Jarf
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引用次数: 6

摘要

本研究旨在探索以阿拉伯语为母语的人如何将社交媒体上包含gemates的人名音译为英语,以及它们产生的音译异常。研究人员从Facebook上收集了406个阿拉伯语母语人士用双音拼出的阿拉伯人名的英文音译样本,并对其进行了分析,以找出双音拼正确的阿拉伯人名的百分比;阿拉伯名字中双音辅音在英语音译中被简化为单音辅音的百分比;阿拉伯名字中单个辅音在英语音译中翻倍的比例。研究发现,三分之一带有双音节的阿拉伯名字符号被正确地音译,即阿拉伯语中的双音节辅音在相应的英语音译中由双音节辅音表示,如复合名(Abdullah, Noureddin)和Nassar, Algammal, Alqattan, Allam, Hagga和son。在41%的名字符号中,在相应的英语音译中,双韵母由一个辅音表示,如Amouna, Amool, Elzahar, Hamam, Elnagar, Sedeek, Fatouh。在26%的英语音译中,一个辅音在相应的音译中被加倍,尽管阿拉伯名字没有双音节,并且辅音发音为单个音素,如ahmed, Anass, Ossama, Quassem, Sammar, Wissam, Yassin, Youniss。最常见的双发辅音是s,占符号总数的23%。由于阿拉伯语的双音拼法有一个辅音和一个变音符标记,这在阿拉伯成年人使用的书面形式中通常不会出现,所以说阿拉伯语的人倾向于将阿拉伯语双音拼法转化为英语中的一个辅音。他们还在阿拉伯名字的英语音译中过度推广了双辅音,这些名字的发音只有一个辅音音素。提出了提高阿拉伯语母语人士在社交媒体上的人名音译能力的建议。
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Gemination Errors in Arabic-English Transliteration of Personal Names on Facebook
This study aimed to explore how Arabic native speakers transliterate personal names containing geminates to English on social media and what transliteration anomalies they produce. A sample of 406 English transliterations of Arabic personal names with geminates by Arabic native speakers was compiled from Facebook and analyzed to find out the percentage of Arabic names in which geminates were transliterated into double consonants correctly; the percentage of Arabic names in which geminated consonants were reduced to a singleton consonant in the English transliteration; and the percentage of Arabic names where a singleton consonant was doubled in the English transliteration.  It was found that one third of the Arabic name tokens with geminates were transliterated correctly, i.e., the geminated consonant in Arabic was represented by a double consonant in the corresponding English transliteration as in compound names (Abdullah, Noureddin) and Nassar, Algammal, Alqattan, Allam, Hagga and son. In 41% of the name tokens, the geminate was represented by a single consonant in the corresponding English transliteration as in Amouna, Amool, Elzahar, Hamam, Elnagar, Sedeek, Fatouh. In 26% of the English transliterations, a single consonant was doubled in the corresponding transliteration, although the Arabic name has no geminates and the consonant is pronounced as a single phoneme as in Ahmmed, Anass, Ossama, Quassem, Sammar, Wissam, Yassin, Youniss. The most commonly geminated consonant was the s which comprised 23% of the tokens. Since Arabic geminates are spelled with a single consonant and a diacritical mark ّ that is not usually shown in the written form used by Arab adults, Arabic speakers tended to transfer the spelling of Arabic geminates into a single consonant in English. They also overgeneralized double consonants in the English transliteration of Arabic names that are pronounced with a single consonant phoneme. Recommendations for improving the transliteration competence of personal names by Arabic native speakers on social media are given.
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