Language should be a matter of choice
Updated: 2014-05-24 09:09
By Raymond Zhou (China Daily)
|
|||||||||
If you don't know what I mean, all you need is to take a bus or subway in Beijing and listen to the announcements. "Get off the train" is not wrong on paper, but with a slightly strident tone you'll feel you're being kicked off.
I once attended an opera performance of The Peony Pavilion, a classic piece with great beauty. The projected English titles essentially turned many of the passages into bawdy humor. I learned that the hack job was delivered by some translating agency, probably staffed by people rolled off the college assembly line.
I told the show's producer that a certain Chinese professor spent his whole career fine-tuning every word of his English translation of this piece. This is not a job for which a four-year education is adequate preparation. Why not license that high-quality version?
China does not need a billion people who speak English poorly; it needs a much smaller population whose English skill is adequate for their jobs. Let each individual decide how much English he or she should master.
And the new testing mechanism is a right step in that direction.
- 'Taken 2' grabs movie box office crown
- Rihanna's 'Diamonds' tops UK pop chart
- Fans get look at vintage Rolling Stones
- Celebrities attend Power of Women event
- Ang Lee breaks 'every rule' to make unlikely new Life of Pi film
- Rihanna almost thrown out of nightclub
- 'Dark Knight' wins weekend box office
- 'Total Recall' stars gather in Beverly Hills
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Turning Africa's resources into rewards |
Long march to end employment bias |
Missing 'bracelet' sets safety alarm bells ringing |
Hidden dangers, ruined lives |
Meeting mummy in the valley of the giants |
The city that's not forbidden, just avoided |
Today's Top News
Philippine court asked to halt new US defence pact
US to withdraw more troops
Snowden: I was trained as spy
US' industrial cyber espionage
Man sentenced in US for smuggling
Explain spying on cyberspace, US told
Tennessee factory brings needed jobs
Ignorance of law no excuse for immigrant child abuse
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |