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Poll: What inspired you to become a translator/interpreter?
מפרסם התגובה: ProZ.com Staff
ProZ.com Staff
ProZ.com Staff
צוות האתר
May 30, 2016

This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "What inspired you to become a translator/interpreter?".

This poll was originally submitted by Richard Levy. View the poll results »



 
Julian Holmes
Julian Holmes  Identity Verified
יפן
Local time: 08:24
מיפנית לאנגלית
Other May 30, 2016

Chance and fate

 
Odile Breuvart
Odile Breuvart  Identity Verified
הממלכה המאוחדת
Local time: 00:24
חבר
מאנגלית לצרפתית
+ ...
Autonomy May 30, 2016

I used to work in offices, basic admin jobs. Translation was a way for me to become my own boss and get more control over my own life. It is not pay that can matter here; but a choice for quality of life.

 
The money May 30, 2016

To a student, it seemed like you could earn crazy money (and back then you could)

 
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Muriel Vasconcellos (X)
Muriel Vasconcellos (X)  Identity Verified
ארצות הברית
Local time: 16:24
מספרדית לאנגלית
+ ...
Love for languages May 30, 2016

In my first Spanish classes in junior high school I already felt the urge to translate. I decided there and then that that was what I would do with my life.

 
Yasutomo Kanazawa
Yasutomo Kanazawa  Identity Verified
יפן
Local time: 08:24
חבר (2005)
מאנגלית ליפנית
+ ...
. May 30, 2016

Got the call.

 
Maria Teresa Borges de Almeida
Maria Teresa Borges de Almeida  Identity Verified
פורטוגל
Local time: 00:24
חבר (2007)
מאנגלית לפורטוגזית
+ ...
Other! May 30, 2016

Life is full of twists and turns and in one of those translation found me!

 
Michael Harris
Michael Harris  Identity Verified
גרמניה
Local time: 01:24
חבר (2006)
מגרמנית לאנגלית
Other May 30, 2016

Julian Holmes wrote:

Chance and fate


Or just slipped into it. Had to do most translation texts in my normal daily activities in the engineering world and it was so much fun that I took the opportunity to go full time when it came and have never turned back.


 
neilmac
neilmac
ספרד
Local time: 01:24
מספרדית לאנגלית
+ ...
Other - most of the above May 30, 2016

I eventually ended up teaching TEFL after I got my degree and later, after several years, started getting into translation, partly inspired by a colleague who works in the English-Spanish-German combination. He would extol the virtues of working from home, not having to deal with the more inept/unsavoury elements found in the quasi-educational environment around here, and this wonderful thing called 'Trados', a sort of philosopher's stone that could pluck money from thin air...
Eventually
... See more
I eventually ended up teaching TEFL after I got my degree and later, after several years, started getting into translation, partly inspired by a colleague who works in the English-Spanish-German combination. He would extol the virtues of working from home, not having to deal with the more inept/unsavoury elements found in the quasi-educational environment around here, and this wonderful thing called 'Trados', a sort of philosopher's stone that could pluck money from thin air...
Eventually, despite my inability to embrace the big T, due to its cost, complexity and other perceived disadvantages, I started doing translations anyway, most of them through people who had at one point or another been students or colleagues of mine. I gradually began to shed the least lucrative/enjoyable teaching jobs in favour of translation and I haven't done any teaching/training/coaching work for a few years now.

As for ticking the boxes:

√ Love for languages
√ I am a 'have-a-go' speaker of multiple languages
√ Don't mind dealing with people as long as they're not total [insert epithet]
√ Natural fit - alway been a bit of a pedant and like quizzy things
√ My university studies - Degree in French/Russian
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Christine Andersen
Christine Andersen  Identity Verified
דנמרק
Local time: 01:24
חבר (2003)
מדנית לאנגלית
+ ...
Desperation May 30, 2016

None of the other careers I thougt I wanted would have me. And at school I was not, repeat not, going to be a secretary with languages or whatever they liked to call it.

I was interviewed for an in-house translating job with a pharmaceuticals firm in Copenhagen back in the 1980s, but not convinced I really wanted it - and I didn't get it anyway. A couple of months later my husband was offered a job the other side of the country, and a lot of things happened in the next 16 years. ... See more
None of the other careers I thougt I wanted would have me. And at school I was not, repeat not, going to be a secretary with languages or whatever they liked to call it.

I was interviewed for an in-house translating job with a pharmaceuticals firm in Copenhagen back in the 1980s, but not convinced I really wanted it - and I didn't get it anyway. A couple of months later my husband was offered a job the other side of the country, and a lot of things happened in the next 16 years.

There are very few jobs in the bay, as we say here in a small town surrounded by the sea.
I spent my evenings at night school and took on any job that would earn me a pay packet. It finally crushed my dreams from schooldays of working in the health services. That involved working with patients hands-on!!

Then out of the blue came this unlikely advert in the paper about an in-house translator with an agency, and I was applying for everything that looked remotely possible. Another interview, and on Friday evening the phone rang. I was furious - I had hoped I could dream about that job over the weekend at least, before they turned me down like everyone else. It took me several minutes to realise the boss was not turning me down, he was offering me the job!

Fate had finally caught up with me. I had to eat humble pie and admit my headmistress was right, as she so often was, that I would do better with languages than in medicine... but it was the best job I ever had, and it set me up for freelancing five years later.

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Doan Quang
Doan Quang  Identity Verified
וייטנאם
Local time: 06:24
מאנגלית לויאטנמית
Other - som of the above May 30, 2016

neilmac wrote:

I eventually ended up teaching TEFL after I got my degree and later, after several years, started getting into translation, partly inspired by a colleague who works in the English-Spanish-German combination. He would extol the virtues of working from home, not having to deal with the more inept/unsavoury elements found in the quasi-educational environment around here, and this wonderful thing called 'Trados', a sort of philosopher's stone that could pluck money from thin air...
Eventually, despite my inability to embrace the big T, due to its cost, complexity and other perceived disadvantages, I started doing translations anyway, most of them through people who had at one point or another been students or colleagues of mine. I gradually began to shed the least lucrative/enjoyable teaching jobs in favour of translation and I haven't done any teaching/training/coaching work for a few years now.

As for ticking the boxes:

√ Love for languages
√ I am a 'have-a-go' speaker of multiple languages
√ Don't mind dealing with people as long as they're not total [insert epithet]
√ Natural fit - alway been a bit of a pedant and like quizzy things
√ My university studies - Degree in French/Russian


- Love for languages
- Love dealing with people
- My university studies - Degree in English - Vietnamese translation


 
EvaVer (X)
EvaVer (X)  Identity Verified
Local time: 01:24
מצ׳כית לצרפתית
+ ...
The same and more specifically, hunger May 30, 2016

Chris S wrote:

To a student, it seemed like you could earn crazy money (and back then you could)

I was no longer a student, but my employment was poorly paid and I needed extra money - and very soon, I earned more on the side than as a secretary. I answered "natural fit", because I soon found out that I had a knack for it.


 
Daniela Slankamenac
Daniela Slankamenac  Identity Verified
סרביה
Local time: 01:24
מאנגלית לסרבית
Combination May 30, 2016

Love for languages > My university studies (degree in English) > translation

I also teach English in a primary school, but I am close to quitting it. I find translation much more challenging, interesting and enjoyable.


 
Kristina Cosumano (X)
Kristina Cosumano (X)  Identity Verified
גרמניה
Local time: 01:24
מגרמנית לאנגלית
We needed the money May 30, 2016

I had been translating for myself and for friends for a couple of years. Then a big source of expected income suddenly vanished, and I turned to translation online to at least help pay expenses until work picked up. I found that I liked it and had a bit of a knack for it, so I kept on going.
But it helped that I was immersed in my source language and had already done a lot of both reading and writing in my target language.


 
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Poll: What inspired you to become a translator/interpreter?






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