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== Film ==
* In ''[[Titanic]]'', we've been told the necklace is called "The Heart of the Ocean." Later when Cal presents the necklace to Rose, he calls it "Le Cœur de la Mer," which both characters simultaneously translate as "The Heart of the Ocean." However, one would usually translate ''mer'' as "sea."
** Of course, if it's a well-known necklace it probably has an official translated name in English, which both characters probably already know. (Compare how everyone "knows" that the "real" translation of the Chinese "Honglou Meng" is "[[
* The treasure map in ''[[The Goonies]]'' is in Spanish, but when translated into English, it becomes rhyming verse. No one even stops to consider how unusual this is.
* Subverted in ''[[The Usual Suspects]]'': a Hungarian who encountered Keyser Soze is translated by an American interpreter as saying that they picked up a ''pasas'', or "package." In reality, {{spoiler|''pasas'' is actually Hungarian slang for "guy," which no one realizes until much later on, giving Verbal enough time to mislead the interrogator until his bail is posted. The fact that the translator's first language is English, and less likely to know slang in another language, makes this scene more realistic. }}
* The movie ''[[Stargate (
** Lightly spoofed and subverted in ''[[Stargate SG-1]]'', where Dr. Jackson (now the team linguist) once translated something as "the place of our legacy" but expressed some doubt by adding that it could also mean "[[Either World Domination or Something About Bananas|a piece of our leg]], but the first seems to make more sense."
*** This was done again when SG-1 was searching for the [[Atlantis|Lost City]]. Jonas Quinn thought that it should be translated as the City of the Lost because the [[Precursors|Ancients]] couldn't possibly lose one of their own cities and of course, Jack O'Neill took this to mean the City of the Dead. They came full circle when Dr. Jackson [[Back From the Dead|returned to the team]] and revealed that the city had been ''built'' lost and was therefore the Lost City.
* Subverted in ''[[Event Horizon]]''. The distress signal sent by the titular starship contains the Latin phrase ''liberate me'' ("save me"). It was later realized that the message was actually ''liberate tutame ex inferis'' ("save yourself from Hell").
** Amusingly enough, the translation was still a little off. It would more accurately mean "free me/yourself."
* [[Atlantis:
== Literature ==
* ''[[
** Which, though poetic, is odd when considering the original was supposedly written in Arabic. Given that the English translation of the book is said to have been contemporaneous to the King James Bible, one might attribute it to a poetic translator.
*** ''[[The Call of Cthulhu]]'' RPG makes a deliberate point of this: with each successive translation of the Necronomicon (or any other [[Tome of Eldritch Lore]] ), its in-game usefulness as a source of knowledge/power/danger decreases.
*** One RPG sourcebook contains a chapter that attempts to explain things like this from an in universe perspective. Its Arabic version of the above quote also rhymes, and actually explains more than the English version.
* Played with in [[The Book of the New Sun]]: ''Terminus Est'', the name of an important execution sword, never receives a single official translation. It's rendered once as ''this is the line of division'' and once as ''this is the place of parting''. Both translators ignore the most obvious choice:''this is the end''. {{spoiler|The ambiguity is a possible reference to the catastrophic events that will violently reshape (but not end) the planet.}}
* [[
** A in-universe trope subversion showing an on-the-spot translation occurs in ''[[
* This is averted in [[The Inheritance Cycle|Eragon]]. Brom translates a poem from the Ancient Language (Elvish) for Eragon, which sounds pretty but has no real rhyme or meter, and Brom says himself that he can't translate it perfectly. And therefore makes perfect sense. Again averted in the sequel, ''Eldest'', when Eragon composes a poem in the Ancient Language. We're shown a translation of it, and it doesn't rhyme either. This allows the author to provide incredibly beautiful, classic poems [[Informed Attribute|without having to write overwhelmingly movie poems fromscratch]].
* The novel ''[[Trixie Belden]] and the Mystery of the Blinking Eye'' features a prophecy written by a Spanish-speaking woman, in Spanish, which is then translated into English. Amazingly, it was written so precisely that it rhymes perfectly in English, and although it becomes a plot point that they aren't sure whether a line ought to read "big headed man" (as in, a man with a physically large head) or "big-headed man" (as in, a man who thinks a lot of himself), this is only an artifact of the English translation, and no such confusion could have existed in the original wording.
* In the first [[
** Then again, Gnommish is less an ancient language and more a [[Re Lex|fancy English cipher]].
* A poem in the final ''[[Deverry]]'' book includes a note that it rhymes in Deverrian, but not English.
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== Live Action TV ==
* Subversion: In ''[[
** Andrew provides his own lampshade a little earlier in the scene when he complains that Klingon was easier to learn than Spanish because the former "had much clearer rules on transitive and intransitive verbs."
* Used twice in ''[[
** Also spoofed in an episode where Lorne states that a group of demons "...either are going to discuss it with the prince, or go eat a cheesemonkey".
* Frequently used in ''[[
** The original Damon Knight short story that the episode was adapted from does attempt to get around this by saying that English and Kanamit share certain linguistic quirks and double meanings. (It also depicts the translation as less like codebreaking than the TZ episode; the people in the story use a Kanamit-English phrasebook as a starting point for the translation.)
*** To get slightly geeky on the subject - it's not that unlikely in any language with transitivity distinction, as the two senses of "serve" describe the same action with different object focus "to serve food (to Man)" and "to serve Man (some food)". I wouldn't be surprised to find similar ambiguity in most languages (at least, on Earth...)
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{{quote| '''Dax:''' Given the tone of the rest of the inscriptions, I would bet on the horrible suffering.}}
* A related instance occurred in the pilot episode of ''[[Lost]]''. Shannon translates the French distress call as "It killed them all." However, the actual pronoun used is "il," which would more commonly be translated as "he." Hence, she more likely would translate the message as "He killed them all." However, seeing as some ''thing'' had just killed the pilot, the line needed to be translated with "it."
* The ''[[Star Trek:
** Another example is the phrase "Sokath. His eyes uncovered!" which is taken to mean "He understands!"
* The ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' episode "Riddles" features Neelix telling a joke to [[The Comically Serious|Tuvok]]. The riddle is, essentially, "Some guy is stranded on a desert island with only a calendar, isn't rescued for six months, but survives. How did he do it?" Tuvok is rather unimpressed at the answer of, "He ate the dates." Later, Tuvok proposes that "He ate the Sundays (sundaes)" could be an alternate answer. These are, mind you, alien characters and neither one has any incentive to learn English since they live with universal translators. Neelix in particular was only exposed to humans (and therefore English) seven years ago. The implication is either that both these characters took the time to learn English for some reason, and the joke wasn't [[Lost in Translation]], or dates/sundaes are both food- and time-related words in three different languages.
** Tuvok, at least, has the excuse of being readily familiar with the Earth dating system. It's not unreasonable to expect Vulcans to have studied English, either, as it is occasionally stated to ''actually'' be the official language of the Federation, not just a [[Translation Convention]]. As for Neelix, he could have simply looked the joke up, and he is sometimes portrayed as quite enthusiastic about studying the cultures of his new friends. (E.g. preparing Klingon food for a holiday B'Elanna doesn't even bother to celebrate.)
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* There's a moment in ''[[Metal Gear Solid]] 4'' where Snake reads out the slogan of the French PMC "Pieuvre Armament" as "Arms of the octopus. Arms for your war." This is a reasonably okay slogan for a PMC named after an octopus, until you realise the slogan was originally in French, and he was translating from that - the appendages/weapons double meaning for the word 'arms' doesn't exist in the original slogan, which uses the words 'tentacles' and 'armaments'. With the wordplay gone, the supposedly catchy slogan loses a lot of advertising power.
** Unless the founders intended it as a [[Bilingual Bonus
== Web Original ==
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