Abstract
Abstract
This study concerns English hyphenated premodifiers (science-based targets; lower-back pain)
contrasted with their German and Swedish correspondences. The data stem from the Linnaeus University English-German-Swedish corpus
(LEGS), which contains non-fiction texts, but comparisons are also made to fiction texts from the English-Swedish Parallel Corpus
(ESPC). The study shows that these condensed and complex premodifiers are more frequent in English originals than in English
translations, and more typical of the non-fiction genre than that of fiction. Information density and terminological precision
thus seem to be more important factors for the use of hyphenated premodifiers than creativity and expressiveness. In original
English, two-thirds of the right-hand elements are either nouns or ed-participles. In translated English,
numerals as left-hand elements (three-page document) are less frequent than in original English. Regarding German
and Swedish correspondences, around half are premodifiers. Postmodifiers in the form of prepositional phrases and relative clauses
are more frequent in Swedish than in German, which instead “overuses” premodifying extended attributes. Compound
adjectives/participles and compound nouns are the most frequent correspondences in both German and Swedish. In almost half the
instances, German and Swedish translators choose the same correspondents, indicating a high degree of similarity in the structural
preferences in the two target languages.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company