来源于《图书和艺术》版块
Johnson
约翰逊语言专栏
Climate-speak
关于气候的表达
Of train-boasts, plane-shame and electric automobiles
火车、飞机和电动汽车
Identifying shifts in the Earth’s climate requires decades of data, not just the observations of 2019 or any other single year. Climate change moves slowly, which is part of its calamitous power. Huge fires in California and Australia are probably worsened by the phenomenon—but no blaze can unequivocally be pinned on it, a fact seized on by those who would rather avoid the subject. Yet in the growing strength and coherence of climate protests, something did change discernibly in 2019.
确定地球气候的变化需要几十年的数据,而不仅仅是2019年或任何其他年份的观测数据。气候变化进展缓慢,这是其灾难性力量的一部分。加州和澳大利亚的大火很可能因为这种现象而更加严重——但不是说所有火灾都是由这个原因引起的,这是那些宁愿回避这个话题的人抓住的一个事实。然而,随着气候抗议活动的强度和连贯性不断增强,在2019年确实发生了一些明显的变化。
Extinction Rebellion, a new movement, disrupted major cities. Greta Thunberg, a teenage activist, was Time’s Person of the Year; she travelled by boat to a climate summit in New York to avoid flying (and the associated carbon emissions). Another summit, in Madrid, ended in acrimony. Policy may not have evolved much, but wider attitudes did— and with them, the language in which the issue is discussed.
各大城市都因新运动“反抗灭绝”气候活动陷入混乱。青年活动人士格蕾塔·桑伯格是《时代》杂志的年度人物;为了避免坐飞机(以及相关的碳排放),她乘船前往纽约参加气候峰会。在马德里的另一场峰会以激烈的争辩结束。政策可能没有太大的变化,但更多人的态度却在变化——以及讨论这个问题的用语。
Some climate-related vocabulary was already in circulation. After a boiling summer in Germany in 2018, the Society for the German Language chose Heisszeit, “Heat Age”, as its word of that year. (It rhymes nicely with Eiszeit, “ice age”.) In the Netherlands, meanwhile, the Society for Our Language plumped for laadpaalklever, or “charging-post sticker”: someone who uses the electric-car charging space for too long, treating it like a free parking place.
一些与气候相关的词汇已经在使用。2018年,德国经历了一个炎热的夏天后,德语协会选择了“Heat Age(热时代)”作为当年的年度词汇。(它和Eiszeit(冰川时代)很押韵。)与此同时,在荷兰,我们的语言协会选择了laadpaalklever这个词,英语为“charging-post sticker(充电贴纸)”,意为有人使用电动汽车充电位太长时间,把它当作一个免费的停车位。
Van Dale, a dictionary publisher, lets the Dutch-speaking public vote on its word of the year (in separate contests in Belgium and the Netherlands). For 2019 Belgians chose winkelhieren, or “buying local”. The Dutch went with an imported word that has a good case for being the winner in English, too: “boomer”. As Chloe Swarbrick, a 25-year-old member of New Zealand’s parliament, was giving an impassioned speech on the impact of climate change on her generation, she coolly dismissed a heckling older mpwith a curt “ok, boomer”. The phrase was already an internet meme; Ms Swarbrick made it the talk of the offline world as well.
词典出版商范德尔组织荷兰语的公众投票选出年度词汇(分别在比利时和荷兰举行)。2019年,比利时人选择了winkelhieren这个词,英语为“buying local(购买本地产品)。荷兰人还创造了一个舶来词“boomer(婴儿潮世代)”,这个词很有可能成为英语词汇的赢家。当25岁的新西兰国会议员克洛伊•斯瓦布里克就气候变化对她这一代人的影响发表慷慨激昂的演讲时,她冷淡地用一句简短的“ok, boomer(意为婴儿潮世代已经跟不上时代,该让孩子们上场了)”打发了一位起哄的年长议员。这句话已经成为网络流行语;斯瓦布里克也让它成为了现实世界的话题。
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