On all ? continents Thread poster: neilmac
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neilmac Spain Local time: 20:45 Spanish to English + ... |
Nicole Schnell United States Local time: 11:45 English to German + ... In memoriam Great article! | Sep 26, 2013 |
Thanks for posting, neilmac!  | | |
This gave me a major headache, when I went on a student exchange to Australia. In Germany, I had learned that Australia and New Zealand were different countries, but belonged to the same continent. The locals took offence at this "knowledge". Of course, I tried to argue this case, instead of simply accepting that the entire concept of continents is different. As one of the comments below the article explains: every part of the world belongs to a continent vs big land mass.
In my wo... See more This gave me a major headache, when I went on a student exchange to Australia. In Germany, I had learned that Australia and New Zealand were different countries, but belonged to the same continent. The locals took offence at this "knowledge". Of course, I tried to argue this case, instead of simply accepting that the entire concept of continents is different. As one of the comments below the article explains: every part of the world belongs to a continent vs big land mass.
In my work I regularly come across a similar cultural understanding issue: England vs UK. In Germany, many people still struggle with the idea that England is only part of the UK, not the equivalent and it surprises me every time that I need to explain this. Things we take for granted.
Excellent article. ▲ Collapse | | |
Tom in London United Kingdom Local time: 19:45 Member (2008) Italian to English Big problem in the UK | Sep 26, 2013 |
dianaft wrote:
This gave me a major headache, when I went on a student exchange to Australia. In Germany, I had learned that Australia and New Zealand were different countries, but belonged to the same continent. The locals took offence at this "knowledge". Of course, I tried to argue this case, instead of simply accepting that the entire concept of continents is different. As one of the comments below the article explains: every part of the world belongs to a continent vs big land mass.
In my work I regularly come across a similar cultural understanding issue: England vs UK. In Germany, many people still struggle with the idea that England is only part of the UK, not the equivalent and it surprises me every time that I need to explain this. Things we take for granted.
Excellent article.
The big problem in the UK is that sometimes it's in Europe, and at other times "Europe" is "somewhere else" - often in the same sentence !
For example: "The UK has the most expensive train fares in Europe." "I'm going to Europe for my holidays."
[Edited at 2013-09-26 08:35 GMT] | |
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Erik Freitag Germany Local time: 20:45 Member (2006) Dutch to German + ...
Interesting article indeed.
It's a bit like having to explain to PMs why I translate "Middle East" as "Naher Osten" (literally "Near East").
[Bearbeitet am 2013-09-26 09:45 GMT] | | |
Diplomatic solution | Sep 26, 2013 |
I would be tempted to translate as 'on all continents', leaving the readers to imply the number for themselves, according to preference...
Thanks for posting. | | |
neilmac Spain Local time: 20:45 Spanish to English + ... TOPIC STARTER
[quote]Helen Hagon wrote:
I would be tempted to translate as 'on all continents', leaving the readers to imply the number for themselves, according to preference...
Thanks for posting. M/quote]
That's what I did in the end! There are some other real gems in the article though, food for thought. | | |
At the risk of being pedantic... | Sep 27, 2013 |
... You haven't told us the context, but I assume it's a business. If so, do they really have an operation in Antarctica? | | |