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Word formation and transparency in medical English

As a side effect of the rapid progress in medical research and of the emergence of new medical conditions, medicine is a domain where new concepts have to be named more frequently than in many other domains. Because of the prominent position of English in medical research, most of these concepts are...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hacken, Pius ten, Panocová, Renáta
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2015
Materias:
XX
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2667665
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author Hacken, Pius ten
Panocová, Renáta
author_facet Hacken, Pius ten
Panocová, Renáta
author_sort Hacken, Pius ten
collection CERN
description As a side effect of the rapid progress in medical research and of the emergence of new medical conditions, medicine is a domain where new concepts have to be named more frequently than in many other domains. Because of the prominent position of English in medical research, most of these concepts are first named in English. This raises questions relating to the naming strategies adopted and the consequences of the choice of particular strategies. These consequences are not restricted to English, because the English terms often need to be translated and are sometimes borrowed.This volume consists of an introduction and eight chapters. The first four chapters focus on the choice of naming strategy and the consequences for the transparency of the resulting names in English. These chapters address the international pharmaceutical nomenclature, the terminology of psychiatry and of middle-ear surgery, and the use of neoclassical word formation. The following four chapters concentrate on the issues of translation and borrowing evolving from the choice of names in English. They address translation into Spanish, Slovak, Polish and Turkish.
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spelling cern-26676652021-04-21T18:27:49Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2667665engHacken, Pius tenPanocová, RenátaWord formation and transparency in medical EnglishXXAs a side effect of the rapid progress in medical research and of the emergence of new medical conditions, medicine is a domain where new concepts have to be named more frequently than in many other domains. Because of the prominent position of English in medical research, most of these concepts are first named in English. This raises questions relating to the naming strategies adopted and the consequences of the choice of particular strategies. These consequences are not restricted to English, because the English terms often need to be translated and are sometimes borrowed.This volume consists of an introduction and eight chapters. The first four chapters focus on the choice of naming strategy and the consequences for the transparency of the resulting names in English. These chapters address the international pharmaceutical nomenclature, the terminology of psychiatry and of middle-ear surgery, and the use of neoclassical word formation. The following four chapters concentrate on the issues of translation and borrowing evolving from the choice of names in English. They address translation into Spanish, Slovak, Polish and Turkish.Cambridge Scholars Publishingoai:cds.cern.ch:26676652015
spellingShingle XX
Hacken, Pius ten
Panocová, Renáta
Word formation and transparency in medical English
title Word formation and transparency in medical English
title_full Word formation and transparency in medical English
title_fullStr Word formation and transparency in medical English
title_full_unstemmed Word formation and transparency in medical English
title_short Word formation and transparency in medical English
title_sort word formation and transparency in medical english
topic XX
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2667665
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