Job description C. Term. (certified Terminologist) in the Nechako Region

Find out what work is like for a C. Term. (certified terminologist) in Canada. This work description is applicable to all Translators, terminologists and interpreters (NOC 51114).

Translators, terminologists and interpreters

Description

Translators translate written material from one language to another. Interpreters translate oral communication from one language to another during speeches, meetings, conferences, debates and conversation, or in court or before administrative tribunals. Terminologists conduct research to itemize terms connected with a certain field, define them and find equivalents in another language. Sign language interpreters use sign language to translate spoken language and vice versa during meetings, conversations, television programs or in other instances. Translators, terminologists and interpreters are employed by government, private translation and interpretation agencies, in-house translation services, large private corporations, international organizations and the media, or they may be self-employed. Sign language interpreters work in schools and courts, and for social service agencies, interpretation services, government services and television stations, or they may be self-employed.

Job duties

Here are some of the main activities and tasks that Translators, terminologists and interpreters have to perform, and some of the physical demands they involve:

  • Translators and translator-revisers
  • Translate a variety of written material such as correspondence, reports, legal documents, technical specifications and textbooks from one language to another, maintaining the content, context and style of the original material to the greatest extent possible
  • Localize software and accompanying technical documents to adapt them to another language and culture
  • Revise and correct translated material
  • May train and supervise other translators.
  • Terminologists
  • Identify the terminology used in a field of activity
  • Conduct terminological research on a given subject or in response to inquiries for the preparation of glossaries, terminology banks, technological files, dictionaries, lexicons and resource centres, and add to terminological databases
  • Manage, update and circulate linguistic information collected from terminological databases
  • Provide consultative services to translators, interpreters and technical writers preparing legal, scientific or other documents that require specialized terminologies.
  • Interpreters
  • Interpret oral communication from one language to another aloud or using electronic equipment, either simultaneously (as the speaker speaks), consecutively (after the speaker speaks) or whispered (speaking in a low whisper to one or two persons as the speaker is talking)
  • Provide interpretation services in court or before administrative tribunals
  • May interpret language for individuals and small groups travelling in Canada and abroad
  • May interpret for persons speaking an Aboriginal or foreign language in a variety of circumstances
  • May train other interpreters.
  • Sign language interpreters
  • Translate sign language to a spoken language and vice versa either simultaneously or consecutively.

Related job titles

Here are some other related job titles that are found in the same occupational category (NOC 51114), and a list of similar occupations:

  • community interpreter
  • conference interpreter
  • court interpreter
  • interpreter
  • legal terminologist
  • literary translator
  • localiser - linguistics
  • medical terminologist
  • sign language interpreter
  • terminologist
  • translator
  • translator adaptor
  • translator-reviser

Similar occupations Help - Similar occupations

Sources Occupational and Skills Information System & National Occupational Classification

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