'Babel Fish' is a
web-based application developed by
AltaVista (now part of
Yahoo!) which
machine translates text or web pages from one of several languages into another. It takes its name from the
Babel fish, a fictional animal used for instantaneous
language translation in
Douglas Adams' novel ''
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.'' The word Babel is a borrowed reference to the
biblical account of the city of
Babel and the various languages which were said to have arisen there. The translation technology for Babel Fish is provided by
SYSTRAN, whose technology also powers most of the language pairs for the translator at
Google Translate and a number of other sites.
It can translate among
English,
Simplified Chinese,
Traditional Chinese,
Dutch,
French,
German,
Greek,
Italian,
Japanese,
Korean,
Portuguese,
Russian, and
Spanish.
While the methods used for translation are advanced, the service makes no claim to produce a perfect translation: the best that is claimed is that it can show the gist of a page or text.
Translations between European languages can be passable, but attempting to translate East Asian Languages to English often produces gibberish, also it doesn't translate romanized asian words. A number of humour sites have sprung up that use the Babel Fish service to translate back and forth between one or more languages (a so-called
round-trip translation).
External links
★
Babel Fish Translation Service
★
Yahoo! Babel Fish Translation Service
★
Lost in Translation (round-trip translation)