Monday, May 31, 2021

Translation and Validation of a Chinese Version of the Cleveland Adole | NSS - Dove Medical Press - Translation

Introduction

Over the past decade, adolescent sleep has become a major public health issue and exploration of the causes and consequences of insufficient sleep has gained increasing attention from researchers, clinicians, parents, and the general public.1–3 According to the National Sleep Foundation,4 healthy teenagers need 8 to 10 hours of sleep every night. Numerous studies have reported that adolescent sleep duration, however, is significantly less than that which is recommended, particularly in Asian countries.5,6 Sufficient sleep is not only necessary to avoid daytime fatigue but is crucial for adolescents’ physical growth, emotional stability, behavioral control, maintenance of cognitive function and academic performance.7–9 Moreover, current studies have also found that the daytime sleepiness was related to the morningness/eveningness dimension; therefore, students with more pronounced eveningness reported greater daytime sleepiness.10–12 Furthermore, adolescents who reach the recommended sleep duration demonstrate a significantly better performance in mathematics, weight control and depression compared to adolescents who have lower than the recommended sleep duration.13–15

One of the most prominent, proximal consequences of sleep loss is daytime sleepiness.16 Daytime sleepiness can be defined by both objective measures (eg, the speed with which one can fall asleep if given the opportunity) and questionnaires that capture various aspects of the subjective phenomenology surrounding the catchall of “sleepiness”. One of the more commonly used tools to assess sleepiness is the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS), which has been previously translated into Chinese.17 While Chen et al (2002) found high levels of internal consistency (Cronbach’s α = 0.81), the ESS is validated for use with adult respondents. Another commonly used tool is the Pediatric Daytime Sleepiness Scale (PDSS), which also has been translated into Chinese,18 though this tool is designed to assess sleepiness in middle school-aged (11–15 years) children.19

The Cleveland Adolescent Sleepiness Questionnaire (CASQ)20 was specifically designed to evaluate adolescents’ experiences of sleepiness in a variety of situations, including in school, at home during the evening, and while in transit. The CASQ has shown acceptable levels of internal consistency reliability, as well as criterion or concurrent validity. The generalizability of the CASQ to other populations or cultures, however, must be assessed21 as it was developed based on adolescents in the US. As such, reliability and validity may be limited in terms of assessing daytime sleepiness among Chinese adolescents, as different cultures have divergent views on the nature, purpose, and importance of sleep.22 There is currently, however, no validated translation of the CASQ into Chinese. In order for a cross-cultural adaptation of a questionnaire to reach equivalence between the original source and target versions of the questionnaire, it is recommended that the items must not only be translated well linguistically but also must be adapted culturally to maintain the content validity of the instrument at a conceptual level across different cultures.23 Thus, there is particular value for cross-cultural studies to develop a validated Chinese version of the CASQ.

In light of the lack of a Chinese version of the CASQ, the purpose of this study was to (1) develop a Chinese translation of the CASQ and (2) establish the sensitivity, specificity, internal consistency, and basic criterion validity data of the Chinese version of the CASQ (C-CASQ). For the translation and cross-cultural adaptation from American English to Chinese, we based our procedures on methodologic guidelines from psychology and sociology.24

Materials and Methods

Prior to participation, all participants signed an informed consent and parents provided informed consent for their child who was under the age of 18 to participate. The study was approved by the National Cheng Kung University Institutional Review Board (IRB). All procedures were conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.

Translation of the CASQ

Questionnaire Translation

The aim of the translation process was to develop a conceptually equivalent version of an English instrument for use among Chinese respondents. As such, it was necessary that the instrument be intuitive, appropriate, and comprehensible in order for the Chinese version to perform practically in the same way as the original. A well-established method for developing conceptually equivalent and linguistically and culturally appropriate versions of a scale is to use both forward translation and back translation.23 The translation was performed using a decentered approach, which seeks to ensure that both the original and translated versions remain meaningful in their respective languages, and which allows revisions to be made in order to ensure the consistency and meaningfulness of the wording in the cultural contexts of both languages. The CASQ was translated into Chinese by two native Taiwanese speakers who were college graduates with degrees in Chinese Literature and familiar with research related to health education. The initial translations by both translators were conducted independently without any communication among the translators. The main researchers and the two translators then analyzed the resulting translations together. After discussing variations in each translation (T1 and T2), a single version (T3) was agreed upon. For example, in the original question, “I feel alert during my classes,” the word “alert” could have multiple translations into Chinese. The translation of T1 tended towards a connotation of vigilance while the translation of T2 tended towards the connotation of concentration. The T3 agreed upon the “concentration” translation as being most representative of the original meaning.

Back Translation

From the synthesized translation (T3), two back translations (BT1 and BT2) were completed by two native English speakers who had no knowledge of or access to the original instrument. One translator was a native-English speaking professor from a Foreign Languages department, with 15 years of Chinese language learning experience. The second translator was a college professor who is a health expert, a resident of the United States and bilingual in English and Chinese. Both back-translations were conducted individually at first, with the main researchers and the two back translators analyzing the back translations together after their completion. After discussing variations between the back translations (BT1 and BT2), a single version (BT3) was agreed upon. A revised Chinese version (T4) was developed based on BT3. For example, the original question, “During the school day, there are times when I realize that I have just fallen asleep,” was translated by BT1 as: “At school, there are times when I find that I have just fallen asleep”, while the translation of BT2 was “There have been a few times I found myself fell asleep during the school day”. As there is no difference between past tense or present tense in Chinese, BT3 decided to ignore the difference between “find” of BT1 and “found” of BT2.

Expert Committee

The translations and back translations (T1-T4 and BT1-BT3) were assessed by two expert clinicians specializing in sleep medicine, with 15 years and 31 years of experience, respectively. The clinicians examined the various versions and relevant annotations from the translators and discussed the items from the questionnaire to ensure a clear final version, equivalent to the original in terms of the connotations of the language used, naturalness of the language, and aspects of culture and belief. The clinicians drew attention to some of the questionnaire’s items and recommended that the reliability and validity of the final version be verified.

Research Design and Participants

Reliability and validity were assessed using a two-stage research design. Stage 1 involved examining internal consistency, and conducting exploratory factor analysis (EFA). Stage 2 involved examining criterion validity (by comparing differences in responses from individuals with different chronotypes) and conducting confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). To satisfy the basic requirement of a sample size of 5–10 participants for each of the 16 items in EFA,25 the researchers recruited a sample of 191 Taiwanese secondary students (grades 9–12). To satisfy a sample size of at least 200 for CFA,26 the researchers recruited a separate sample of 267 Taiwanese secondary students (grades 9–12). All participants were full-time students and not preselected for any type of sleep disorder or other health problem. Students were tested randomly throughout the day.

Measures

Cleveland Adolescent Sleepiness Questionnaire (CASQ)

The CASQ was designed to measure daytime sleepiness in adolescents from 11 to 17 years of age. The CASQ consists of a total of 16 items scored using a 5-point Likert scale (with five of the statements worded for reversed scoring) resulting in a scoring range of 16–80. Higher scores indicate increased daytime sleepiness. The four factors of the CASQ are sleepiness in school (five questions), alertness in school (five questions), sleepiness during the evening (three questions), and sleepiness during transport (three questions). The Cronbach’s α for the original English CASQ version is 0.89.20 The results of exploratory factor analysis explained 55% of the total variance.20 The Root Mean Square Error of Approximation, Tucker–Lewis Index and Comparative Fit Index of confirmatory factor analysis for the original English CASQ version were 0.06, 0.94 and 0.95, respectively.20

Morningness-Eveningness Scale for Children (MESC)

A Chinese version of the MESC was administered to participants in order to determine chronotype, a measure of the degree to which respondents prefer mornings or evenings.27 This measure, initially validated in 11 to 12 year-old participants, has also frequently been used with adolescent samples. The test-retest reliability of the Chinese version is 0.75.27 The internal consistency reliability of the sample evaluated by this study is 0.74. The current study used cut-off values at the 25th and 75th percentile to define chronotypes,28 with resulting values of 10–23 corresponding to evening-type chronotypes, 24–28 for intermediate-type chronotypes, and 29–43 for morning-type chronotypes. As several studies have shown that evening-type adolescents suffer from greater daytime sleepiness than morning-types,29,30 chronotype was used as a measure for establishing initial criterion validity.

Data Analysis

Internal consistency, EFA, and criterion validity were conducted using SPSS 20.0 (IBM, Armonk NY). CFA was conducted using AMOS 24.0. Internal consistency was measured using Cronbach’s α for the overall score and subscale scores. Cronbach’s α ≥ 0.7 is considered acceptable with α ≥ 0.8 considered good, but α ≥ 0.9 suggesting potential redundancy among scale items.31 The KMO statistic and Bartlett’s test were first evaluated to determine the suitability of the data for EFA. KMO should be 0.60 or higher to proceed with factor analysis.32 Criterion validity was measured by independent sample t-tests for overall score and subscale scores, comparing sleepiness differences by chronotype. CFA was evaluated by multiple goodness-of-fit indices:33,34 [1] χ2/df, [2] Root Mean Square Error of Approximation (RMSEA), [3] Comparative Fit Index (CFI), [4] Tucker–Lewis Index (TLI), and [5] Standardized Root Mean square Residual (SRMR).

Results

Participants (N = 458; 51% female, 15.5 (SD = 1.14) years old) from grades 9 through 12 completed the questionnaires. They were randomly assigned to one of the two groups, with the data from the first group used to test for internal consistency and conduct EFA (stage 1, n = 191; 55% female, 15.7 (SD = 1.14) years old), and data from the second group used to establish criterion validity and conduct CFA (stage 2, n = 267; 48% female, 15.3 (SD = 1.12) years old). There were no differences between stage 1 and stage 2 groups regarding gender (χ2 = 2.80, p = 0.09) or age (χ2 = 2.10, p = 0.55) by chi-square test for homogeneity.

Internal Consistency Reliability

The internal consistency for the overall instrument was α = 0.85. All subscales were found to demonstrate acceptable to good internal consistency: 0.77 (sleepiness during the evening), 0.77 (sleepiness during transport), 0.79 (alertness in school), and 0.86 (sleepiness in school).

Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA)

Principal component analysis with the varimax rotation was utilized to extract the factor structure. EFA was performed on each of the 16 items, with a KMO value of 0.82 and Bartlett’s test of sphericity = 1311.29 (p = 0.00), indicating that the use of factor analysis was appropriate. The four factors each had eigenvalues greater than 1 and explained 65.01% of the total variance.

Criterion Validity

Comparing CASQ-measured sleepiness between the two chronotypes revealed that, consistent with the literature,10–12 evening-types demonstrated higher levels of daytime sleepiness on the CASQ overall score and all subscale scores (Table 1).

Table 1 Sleepiness Differences by Chronotype

Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA)

The CFA model demonstrated a good fit of the data to the CASQ model in terms of each of the five summary metrics (Table 2; Figure 1).

Table 2 Results of Confirmatory Factor Analysis

Figure 1 Results of confirmatory factor analysis for the C-CASQ.

Discussion

The CASQ had been widely used in the area of sleep medicine, children’s health care, nursing research, and psychology and education.35–38 The purpose of this work was to translate, adapt, and evaluate the psychometric properties of a Chinese version of the CASQ (C-CASQ) [see Additional File 1] using a sample of adolescents from Taiwan. We found that the C-CASQ had good psychometric properties and was consistent in measuring sleepiness differences in morning and evening chronotypes.

The Cronbach’s α for the original English CASQ version was 0.89,20 while the Cronbach’s α for the C-CASQ designed and evaluated in this study was 0.85. Furthermore, no items from the original CASQ scale were removed, indicating that the scales have similar psychometric properties for different populations. The parameter estimates for the relationships among the CASQ factors provide confirmatory evidence that the four factors reflect separate, yet conceptually related constructs. Thus, the C-CASQ scale developed in this study has the potential to allow researchers to meaningfully compare the responses of individuals from different cultures using two versions (languages) of the same scale.

Our study does have several limitations. Age and gender were considered as potential confounding variables but as with all studies, especially those that are not randomized, confounding variables could have obscured an underlying association. As such, it is possible that there is either a sex or age difference in our translation that went undetected. Future studies would benefit by examining the factor structure of the C-CASQ among different populations, determining whether different structures exist based on different sociocultural contexts or clinical samples. Moreover, the test-retest reliability of the scale can be further established. Although the internal consistency of the C-CASQ was adequate, further studies using data collected at different time points to assess the reliability of the scale across time intervals are required.

The differences in subjective and objective sleep measurements have been increasingly discussed.39,40 An important limitation in the current study that could be rectified in future studies would be to establish stronger criterion convergent validity by examining the relationship between the construct of subjective sleepiness, which could be measured by the C-CASQ, and other subjective or objective measures of sleepiness.41 As there is likely to be a degree of non-overlap in the variance explained by different measures of sleepiness, it will be important to understand how much is due to culture or language and how to adequate address these differences using properly designed questionnaires.

Conclusion

In sum, the newly translated Chinese version of the CASQ is deemed to be a feasible and acceptable instrument that satisfies the intentions of the study aiming to measure the extent of sleepiness in Chinese adolescent populations. This study has presented statistical evidence that the C-CASQ translation is accurate in a linguistic sense, as well as reliable and valid. It has psychometric features that make it suitable for use as a standardized test of sleepiness for screening or clinical trials among Chinese adolescents. The C-CASQ provides a simple, inexpensive method for monitoring adolescent responses in order to evaluate daytime sleepiness and sleep-related problems, such as insomnia.

Abbreviations

BT1 … 3, back translation version 1 … 3; CASQ, Cleveland Adolescent Sleepiness Questionnaire; C-CASQ, Chinese version of the Cleveland Adolescent Sleepiness Questionnaire; CFA, confirmatory factor analysis; CFI, Comparative Fit Index; EFA, exploratory factor analysis; ESS, Epworth Sleepiness Scale; MESC, Morningness-Eveningness Scale for Children; PDSS, Pediatric Daytime Sleepiness Scale; RMSEA, root mean square error of approximation; SRMR, standardized root mean square residual; T1 … 4, translation version 1 … 4; TLI, Tucker–Lewis Index.

Acknowledgments

We thank Director Cheng-Yu Lin from the Sleep Center of the National Cheng Kung University Hospital who provided translation expertise.

Author Contributions

All authors made a significant contribution to the work reported, whether that is in the conception, study design, execution, acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation, or in all these areas; took part in drafting, revising or critically reviewing the article; gave final approval of the version to be published; have agreed on the journal to which the article has been submitted; and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work.

Funding

This study was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, R.O.C. [grant #106-2918-I-006-002, YTY]. The funding agency played no role in the design of the study, the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data, or in the writing of the manuscript.

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.

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This cool Microsoft Teams update will make sure nothing gets lost in translation - TechRadar - Translation

Microsoft is in the process of migrating a useful Teams feature to mobile clients, in a bid to support multilingual workers and help make international collaboration easier.

As revealed in two new product roadmap entries, Teams for iOS and Android will soon receive inline message translation, which is currently only available with the desktop version.

“Inline message translation in channels lets users translate channel posts and replies into their preferred language. To translate a message, press-and-hold the channel post or reply and then select ‘Translate’,” said Microsoft.

According to the roadmap, messages will be translated into whichever language the user has marked as default, but translation settings can also be changed via Settings > General Translation.

The translation feature is still undergoing testing, but is expected to roll out to smartphone users in July.

Microsoft Teams update

With the rise of remote working, companies have found themselves able to take full advantage of an international pool of talent. However, an increasingly multilingual workplace also comes with a few inherent challenges, communication chief among them.

By bringing the inline translation feature to mobile platforms, Microsoft will hope to plug a potential avenue for miscommunication, helping those that use a second language at work to double-check they have fully understood messages received over Teams.

With people from external organizations now able to join Microsoft Teams group chats, the translation feature could also help users communicate more effectively with international partners and clients.

The move to bring inline translation to Android and iOS is also part of a wider accessibility push. Since March 2020, Microsoft has rolled out a range of Teams features designed to ensure everyone is able to make full use of the platform, such as live captions, transcription and new meeting views.

Most recently, the company announced a variable playback speed feature for meeting recordings, which will be helpful to all users, but especially anyone that suffers from hearing loss or conditions such as dyspraxia.

The translation of the Council of Europe Handbook on children's participation “Listen – Act – Change” has been published - Council of Europe - Translation

1 June marks the International Day for the Protection of Children. This day is an excellent opportunity to reaffirm the importance of the rights of children around the globe. In particular, it is extremely important to remember that it is necessary to listen to the voices of children and consider their opinions, especially in those issues and decisions that directly affect them. On the eve of the International Children’s Day, the Council of Europe Project “Combating violence against children in Ukraine” presents the Ukrainian translation of the Council of Europe Handbook on children’s participation “Listen – Act – Change” for professionals working for and with children.

The Council of Europe’s Recommendation CM/ Rec(2012)2 on the participation of children and young people under the age of 18 sought to make this right real in the member states of the Council of Europe. Our Organisation has also made major strides in embedding child participation in its work by ensuring that children can influence its standard-setting, monitoring and capacity building work and by bringing their voices and powerful messages at its international events. The consecutive Council of Europe Strategies for the Rights of the Child have thrust forward actions to promote the participation of children in all settings. This Handbook therefore represents a substantive contribution to the current Strategy for the Rights of the Child (2016 to 2021).

This Handbook is for professionals who work with children in schools and other education settings, hospitals and other health care settings, alternative care settings, child protection services, immigration and asylum, family support and pre-school services. It is for social workers, teachers, judges, lawyers, immigration officers, psychologists, civil servants, youth workers and day care workers. The aim of the Handbook is to assist these – and other - professionals in understanding and supporting children’s right to be heard. It offers practical approaches to support professionals to “do” children’s participation and make it work. The Handbook explains what the term “children’s participation” means and demonstrates how professionals can support the children they work with – both as individuals and as groups – to participate in decisions that affect them. The Handbook promotes an approach which has at its core a process that establishes dialogue between the adult professionals and children.

The Council of Europe Handbook on children’s participation “Listen – Act – Change” is available for download at the following link: https://ift.tt/3p7rFAi

The best new literature in translation: stunning reissues and rediscovered writers - The Irish Times - Translation

This month’s translation column features stunning reissues and rediscovered writers from Italy, Argentina, and Romania, plus a satire from Slovenia, a multi-layered narrative from Brazil, and a dark comedy from Japan.

Natalia Ginzburg has undergone a much-deserved reassessment in recent years, largely due to the rerelease of much of her work by Daunt Books. The Italian writer and political activist, who died in 1991, was equally at home with fiction as with essay form. Her marvellously compact prose is beautifully showcased in the novella The Dry Heart (Daunt Books, 120pp, £8.99), first published in 1947 and translated into English in 1952 by Frances Frenaye. To read this newly reissued translation some 60 years after its initial publication is to encounter not a stuffy period piece but rather something fresh and clear.

An English dictionary of ancient Greek “don’t blush” with a fresh look at cruelty | Books - Illinoisnewstoday.com - Dictionary

The Victorian attempt to conceal the meaning of the rough words of ancient Greek will be wiped out by a new dictionary created over 23 years. This is the first time in almost 200 years. It’s a fresh look at the language and promises to students studying today’s classics that they don’t have to blush.

Late scholar John Chadwick first came up with the idea of ​​updating HG Liddell and Robert Scott’s 1889 dictionary, the Intermediate Greek-English Dictionary, in 1997. And it’s packed with outdated terminology and understated Victorian translations of the more colorful ancient Greek. Nevertheless, this is the most commonly used reference book for English school and college students.

Initially, Chadwick’s project was thought to take five years, but Professor James Diggle of the University of Cambridge, who was then chairing the advisory board, said that intermediate lexicons are “too old in concept, design, and content.” He said that was soon revealed. The team will have to start over.

Homer … I read it anew. Photo: De Agostini / Getty Images

Diggle and his fellow editors then undertook the “difficult task” of rereading most of the examples of ancient Greek literature from Homer to the beginning of the second century C.E. They then looked up the 24 letters of the Greek alphabet and created a modern guide for today’s students about the meaning and years of development of ancient Greek words. This lexicon is the first since 1843 to be based on a whole new reading of Greek text.

“At the beginning of the project, I promised to read everything the editor wrote. I soon realized that if we were to get to the end, we should start writing our own entries,” Diggle said. Said.

“The greatest moment of relief and joy is when you can sign off for the final proof and tell the publisher,’This is it.’ You can print.” We are finally there. You can’t imagine what it was like to realize that you arrived. I literally cried with joy. “

The completed Cambridge Greek Dictionary is published by the Cambridge University Press and lasts up to two volumes, with approximately 37,000 Greek words quoted by 90 authors and 1,500 pages.

The editor of the new dictionary said, “I’m willing to blush,” when it comes to the phrase “bringing a blush to the Victorian cheeks.”<0xAD><0xAD>ζζω (Chezo), Translated by Liddell and Scott as “easing yourself and doing your own needs”, defined in the new dictionary as “defecation” and translated as “feces”. βινβω (Vineo) Is no longer “Illegal sexual frustration, Khowar”, but “Fuck”. λαικβζω (Leicazo) Was translated as “to a bitch” in a 19th century dictionary, but is now defined as “doing a blowjob” and translated as “sucking a cock”.

Outdated and aggressive words are also renewed. Liddell and Scott are βλαγτη (bellow) As “a kind of slippers worn by Fop”, it is described in the Greek dictionary of Cambridge as “a kind of simple footwear, slippers”. κροκωτ or higher (Crocotos) Is no longer defined as a “saffron robe worn by gay women”, but as a “saffron gown (weared by women)”.

“In the words of Edward Gibbon, Liddell and Scott can argue that’my English is chastity and all lawless sentences are left in the ambiguity of the language learned.’ “It would have been,” said Diggle. “We use modern English.”

The Cambridge Greek Vocabulary also starts each item with a vocabulary of words. This is a radically different approach from the 19th century vocabulary, which began the item with the first appearance of the word in literature. Diggle thinks of words like “π storm” λις, which is familiar to many in the form of “polis” in English. “Our article shows the different sensations that this word can have. In its first use, it’s” Citadel, Acropolis. ” Second, more generally, it is also “city, town”, and “territory, land”. And more specifically, in the classical era, “a city as a political entity, a city-state.” It also refers to city dwellers as “communities, citizen groups”.

Professor Robin Osborne of the Faculty of Classical Studies at the University of Cambridge said the faculty had invested in a new dictionary to “contribute to the Greek education of the next century.”

“This gives students safe and easy access to ancient Greek,” said Osborne. “It is very important that we remain involved in ancient literature. Greece, Not as a frozen text in the past world, but as a text related to the world in which we live. “

Michael Sharp, publisher of Lexicon at Cambridge University Press, states that this is “one of the most important classics ever published” and “a milestone in the history of classics.” ..

However, Diggle said he had no plans to expand further in lexicographic order. “No, no, no, no, no,” he said. “I finished this work with great comfort and joy. For the last 15 years, I haven’t done anything else. Really I Dominated his life. “

This article was revised on May 28, 2021. In previous versions, the Greek word βινκω was misspelled as “βββνβκω”. In addition, the heading was changed and the reference to the dictionary, “the first ancient Greek English dictionary since the Victorian era,” was removed.

An English dictionary of ancient Greek “don’t blush” with a fresh look at cruelty | Books

Source link An English dictionary of ancient Greek “don’t blush” with a fresh look at cruelty | Books

Saturday, May 29, 2021

Mozilla integrates Firefox Translations into Firefox - Ghacks Technology News - Translation

Mozilla has integrated Firefox Translations, the upcoming privacy-friendly translation system, into the latest Nightly version of the Firefox web browser. Translations happen locally on the system, and not in the cloud; this is the main distinguishing factor between the translation feature and popular solutions such as Chrome's Google Translate integration.

We have followed the development of Firefox Translations, previously known as Project Bergamot closely, ever since the project was revealed back in October 2019.

The first usable Firefox extension was released last month. Then-called Project Bergamot, it introduced translation functionality in the browser. Earlier this month, a second version was released and with it came the name change to Firefox Translations.

The new version introduced several improvements that made the extension leaner and more useful in the process.

Today, still in May 2021, Mozilla included the latest version of the translation engine into the Firefox Nightly browser. The feature is not enabled by default, but all users who use the latest Nightly version can install it. The Nightly version on my test system had the version 90.0a1 (2021-05-29).

The translation feature supports only a handful of languages at this time, including English and Spanish. Support for more languages will be introduced soon.

Enable Firefox's Translation feature

firefox enable translations

  1. Load about:config in the Firefox address bar.
  2. Confirm that you will be careful.
  3. Search for extensions.translations.disabled.
  4. Set the preference to FALSE to enable translations in Firefox.
  5. Restart the browser.

You will find Firefox Translations listed under add-ons in Firefox. The version is still the same as the version that we reviewed earlier this month.

You can disable the translation feature again by disabling the extension in the add-ons manager, about:addons, or by setting the preference to TRUE instead.

Using the built-in translation feature

firefox built-in translations

Visit a website that is in a foreign language, which is not a system language on the operating system, and Firefox will display a small translation bar at the top. It offers the usual options, to translate the page, or to never translate the language or the site.

Closing Words

Integration in Firefox is a milestone for the project. While it is certain that the translations feature won't be included in Stable versions of the Firefox web browser anytime soon, it is clear that Firefox will get the long-awaited translation feature eventually.

Now You: Have you tried the translation feature? What would you like to see (via Sören Hentzschel)

Summary

Mozilla integrates Firefox Translations into Firefox

Article Name

Mozilla integrates Firefox Translations into Firefox

Description

Mozilla has integrated Firefox Translations, the upcoming privacy-friendly translation system, into the latest Nightly version of the Firefox web browser.

Author

Martin Brinkmann

Publisher

Ghacks Technology News

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