Abstract
This study compared the linguistic difficulty of legal translated texts with the syntactic complexity of native English legal writings in order to demonstrate the statistically significant differences between the two big datasets. The study applies features of the syntactic complexity of sentences within legal text translations that translated texts are less complicated than their original counterparts. It provides an example of how easy plain English translation in legal communication might result in understandable target writings. The findings of the legal translation of the people of three regions reveal striking patterns in terms of syntactic complexity and legal communication in plain English, which are consistent with previous research. Complex nominal and hypotactic structures result in a high number of propositions per sentence, placing a high demand on the cognitive processing abilities of those who read and understand the text. The statistics show considerable differences among the three locations and various forms of company law corpora. The study is the first large-scale quantitative analysis of the accessibility of legal jargon compared to other forms of English, emphasizing the efficacy of plain-language initiatives in legal translations.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
In applied linguistics research, syntactic complexity has been used extensively as a measure to capture the complexities of academic writing and texts produced by L2 English writers. Syntactic complexity focuses on the length of the unit of production, the extent of clausal embedding, types of structures, and the nuanced nature of the structures within the production units (Lu, 2011, p. 36). In his paper on Arabic-English bi-directional translation, Al-Jabr (2006, p. 206) directs our attention to three key features that are argued to make up syntactic complexity in the translation domain. These include the linguistic features of a given language (e.g., preference for coordination/subordination), the genre of the text (e.g., legal/journalistic writing) and the lexical or grammatical preferences of the translators.
Legal translation is known as the subgenre of TS. Likewise, the complexity of the language of law warrants further investigation as legal texts have increasingly begun to find their way into the social arena. For instance, in recent years, legal translated texts have started to be published, circulated and read at international organizations, in public services and in the private sector (Biel et al., 2019). Legal translation, which is the subject of this paper, implies the “language of the law of England, America” (Tiersma, 2008, p. 7; Giczela-Pastwa, 2019; Afzaal, 2022), of other countries in which English is an official language and of countries that interact internationally within the arenas of business, international affairs and trade.
The present study sought empirically informed insights into the legal translation of company laws while comparing Chinese-translated corpora with existing British corpus and Hong Kong Company translated laws in syntactic complexity. The focus was on the legal translation and plain structure used by non-native English translators of legal terms in Hong Kong and China. With the research gap and widespread usage of LT in mind, the study’s goal was to identify the elements that impact legal translation, compare legal translated texts with non-translated materials and determine how far legal correspondence translation has made communication effective. Ramos and Cerutti (2022) suggest that “due to the expansive nature of the legal system and its various subfields and crossing conceptual networks, which address almost every facet of human existence, legal writings cover a wide range of topics conceptually”, (p. 22).
More broadly, this paper examines the syntactic structure of languages used in legal translated texts and investigates whether translated texts and translation norms through the application of the analytic lens of Kachru’s (1985) Three Circles Model of World Englishes and norm orientation) interact and experience a transformation. Kachru’s Three Circles model provides a theoretical underpinning to categorize the regions based on the English Language spoken in these countries. For instance, the inner circle offers insights from the region of English native speakers such as people of the United Kingdom or the USA. The outer circle focuses on the circle includes countries under the direct control of the UK as colonies where English is the official language. Lastly, the expanding circle focuses on the foreign language as norm-dependent and mainly depends on the inner circle.
Therefore, the study undertakes plain language because plain English is an initiative that emphasizes the accessibility of communication. Even a person who is not trained in law should understand what is being said in a contract, not just the legal professionals who are drafting it. The study also highlights the difficulty of archaic legal jargon and complex syntax of legal texts and advocates using plain language, using words that everyone can comprehend (Mattila, 2016; Adler, 2012, Yu, 2021).
Studies of syntactic complexity in translation
A large body of literature on syntactic complexity studies has investigated the academic writing of L2 and L1 learners in terms of syntactic complexity. Still, fewer studies have provided insights into the use of syntactic complexity in translated texts produced by non-native English speakers. As part of his research, Lu et al. (2020) looked at the indicators of syntactic complexity in three components that were employed in this study for instance, the Biber Tagger proposed by Biber et al., (1999), the Coh-Metrix proposed by McNamara et al., (2014), and the L2 Syntactic Complexity Analyzer initiated by (Lu, 2010). In addition, Lu (2010) created the L2SCA, which uses 14 metrics to computerize syntactic complexity analysis of L2 English texts in the target language. Pallotti (2015) considers complexity as polysemous in second language acquisition, and Bulté and Housen, 2012) define complexity as cognitive or linguistic. Lu (2017) defined complexity in syntactic structures ‘as the diversity and level of sophistication of syntactic structures used in textual creation’, (p. 5, 2017).
Scholars in the field of legal translation have demonstrated a particular interest in the processes of multilingual legislative drafting that are utilized in various organizations on both the national and international levels (Dillion, 2022). According to Mancilla et al. (2015), non-native speakers employ more coordinating and complicated phrases but far less subordinated, than native speakers, even though expert non-native speakers writing approaches native speaker writing in terms of the quantity of compliance. Ansarifar et al. (2018) touched on the phrasal complexity within the abstract sections of theses produced by L1 learners. They (2018) further identified that “the phrasal complexity, measured using four phrasal modification indices, are the lowest in master’s theses and highest in published RAs, and concluded that academic writing becomes more complex with writer expertize (p. 12)”. In addition, another study by Song and Wang (2019) compared abstracts written in English of doctoral theses by L1 Chinese and L1 English students. The results of their study reported less use of subordination than L1 English students.
According to Wu et al. (2020), “ELF writers utilize sentences and clauses that are longer than those used by L1 English writers, (p. 12)”. On the other hand, a recent study by the authors of Yin et al. (2021) investigated differences in engagement with syntactic complexity between emerging and experienced international publication authors in seven research article (RA) part-genres and presented practical implications of syntactic complexity in second language writing programs. At the same time, this study is distinct in that it examines the length of legal texts at the word and sentence level to determine the complexity of legal writings. Liu and Afzaal (2021) investigated the simplification hypotheses in corpus-based translation studies that should be approached from the perspective of syntactic complexity. Two comparable corpora are used in this study: the English monolingual part of COCE (Corpus of Chinese English) and the native English corpus of FLOB (French Language and Literature Corpus) (Freiburg-LOB Corpus of British English).
Syntactic complexity and legal translation
Although the foci of the legal translation have not only proliferated in the last decade but also increasingly widened their focus due to diverse implications, the legal system comprises its own system, terminologies, axiology, and boundaries to shape their concepts (Łucja Biel, 2017). In this sense, it is necessary to investigate the legal translation of company laws in non-native English-speaking countries. Besides, Maaß & Rink (2021) propose that legal communication requires some linguistic and specific jargon knowledge to understand the legal terms. As legal communication is technical, it has several characteristic features useful for communication between experts. Also, when familiar persons are addressed in specific legal terms, such syntactic forms constitute accessibility barriers (Rink, 2020, 117). Perhaps, the language complexity reveals the ability to use a wide and varied range of sophisticated structures and vocabulary. Therefore, language plays a significant role in legal correspondence; however, on the other hand, translation is inextricably connected to language and translation.
The languages contribute significantly to law correspondence, from legislation to legal documents and translation to interpretation of legal language, rules, and correspondence. A comparative approach to legal studies is undoubtedly not a new marvel. Biel et al. (2019) consider ‘legal translation and interpretation an interdisciplinary area of linguistic practice’, (p .7, 2019). Moreover, in corpus linguistics, the phenomenon of legal translation has already been expanded for the last four years. The research in legal translation has achieved a significant pace in recent years.
Although some prior studies have discussed the simplification of legal translation (Biel et al., 2019; Biel, 2016; Bolton, 2009), there is a dire need to examine the complexity of translated texts, legal documents, and correspondence. Furthermore, as the legal discourse is always at par with the approach of an ordinary person, translation makes it easier for the public. In this sense, it is necessary to examine the syntactic complexity of legal translation to unveil the linguistic structure to maximize competency in legal translation works.
Legal translation refers to translating legal documents and companies’ laws to make the text understandable and clear. Previously, Biel’s studies (2014: pp. 36–48) examined the phraseological continuum in the language of the law, which accounts for non-terminological categories that are statistically significant in the genre of legislation. Furthermore, she (2018) says that a few types of research have been reported while incorporating corpus-based methodology in the field of legal translation (Biel, 2018, p. 34). With the advent of corpus-based studies, applying corpora in legal translation brings fruitful results (e.g., Biel, 2015, 2018; Pontrandolfo, 2011; Trklja, 2017). In translation workflow, numerous small-scale corpus-based studies of legal translations have been conducted in Chinese-English legal translation (e.g., Li and Wang 2013), which have not been compared to other European languages.
The legal translation helps readers understand the complexity and ambiguous nature of legal discourse practised in courtrooms. English is taken as an official and second Language in Hong Kong, whereas English is taken as a Foreign Language in China. Consequently, these investigations are worthwhile to pursue because they will aid in discovering translation conventions that function both in the networks of translation and in the cognitive act of translations (cf. Toury, 1995; Xiao and Hu, 2015; Eagleson, 2014). Laviosa’s (2002) study, based on the analytical framework of linguistic variety, sentence length and information capacity to measure simplification, recorded that translated versions of texts have restricted lexical variety, and the ratio between content and function words remains low.
The study is significant for two reasons: many studies conducted in the Chinese-English translation background followed qualitative approaches in translation despite some recent research using corpus-based quantitative techniques. This paper analyzes the syntactic complexity of legal translation corpora. Therefore, this study identifies the existing gap in Chinese-English legal translation research in several areas. Thus, the study fills the gap as no parallel contrastive study has been conducted in the legal discourse regarding syntactic complexity.
Finally, the current study adopts a corpus-based contrastive analysis of legal translation to analyze the syntactic complexity in two translated texts. We take syntactic complexity as a theoretical framework to determine how translated texts and their norms have affected the production of legal texts in plain English in Hong Kong and native English-speaking countries.
The present study
The present study contributes to the body of scholarship that analyzes the syntactic features of translated law texts. More specifically, this study seeks to empirically inform insights into the legal translation of company laws while comparing Chinese-translated corpora with existing British corpus and Hong Kong Company translated laws in terms of syntactic complexity. The study is of worth because legal language is not static but dynamic, and legal translation shares characteristics with other translation activities such as “a norm-governed human and social behavior, a text-producing act of legal communication” (Cao, 2013, p. 422; Chesterman, 1993, 2000; Dullion, 2022).
This paper mainly focuses on the legal translation and plain structure of non-native English translators of legal terms in Hong Kong and China. As the previous studies based on syntactic complexity covered how ELF writers engage syntactic complexity differently, this study will fill the existing gap, how non-native English speakers engage syntactic complexity in their translations. As a result, the current study contributes significantly to the body of knowledge on legal translated corpora writing syntactic complexity by addressing these research gaps.
Research questions
The following questions were addressed in this study:
RQ1) How do the translated and non-translated legal text, as reflected in the Hong Kong Government’s websites, differ from across the two regions of China, Hong Kong and the UK, regarding syntactic complexity?
RQ2) If the differences or similarities are significant, can they be used in conventions of plain English movement?
Methods
The Corpus
The corpus of the study comprises the translated texts of UK company law (the inner circle) and legal translated texts of the Mainland and the Hong Kong (the outer circle) as per the domain of plain English movements. The data of the UK is monolingual, whereas sub-corpora is bilingual aligned at the sentence level. The Hong Kong corpus includes the legal texts of companies’ ordinance executed in 1932 and modification of this law in 1984, 2012 and 2014, respectively. At the same time, the corpus of Mainland China includes the legal texts of company law for the years 1993, 1999, 2004, and 2006.
In addition, the study employed Kachru’s model to set up the corpus in our research. Braj Kachru’s (1985) idea of three circles (the inner circle, the outer circle, and the expanding circle) presents the notion of English language variations across various cultures. In a similar domain, these circle offers to measure English Language’s spread, acquisition, and functional patterns in socio-cultural settings (Kachru 1985, 12). Kachru (1985) proposes that the inner circle works for the countries where English is taken as the mother tongue, and the outer circle represent countries and regions where the English Language is taken as a second Language (L2). The following figure describes the modification of laws in different stages in parallel-comparable company law corpus (Fig. 1).
Syntactic complexity analysis
The study employed an L2 Syntactic Complexity Analyzer (SCA) (Lu, 2010) to analyze the corpus. Table 1 accounts for fourteen syntactic complexity features, including five dimensions. Lu (2010) categorizes the syntactic complexity analyzer as advanced writers of English. It was validated with the produced English corpus of Chinese learners, which consisted of 3554 essays written by English majors studying at universities in China. Two different coders each annotated ten different articles to test the analyzer’s reliability. SCA classifies syntactic measures into five kinds, e.g., three metrics are related to the analysis of length of production at the clause level, sentential, or T-unit level: mean size of clause (MLC), mean length of sentence (MLS), and mean length of T-unit (MLT); sentence complexity ratio; the amount of subordination, the amount of coordination, and the relationship between particular syntactic structures and larger production units, i.e., complex nominals per clause (CN/C), complex nominals per T-unit (CN/T), and verb phrases per T-unit (VP/T).
Results
This section provides empirical data and discusses the questions formulated in section 1. The average difference can be used as an indicator of difference to understand the simplification level of the translation. So, the average mark is the value of p should be less than 0.005 (p < 0.005) in the features of syntactic complexity.
The results show a statistically significant difference in the fourteen elements of syntactic complexity of the Hong Kong company law dataset. As can be seen, the value of p of two components such as MLS and CT_T are not significant. However, other features are substantial. For example, the new dataset Cap622, such as MLS, MLT, MLC, CS, VP_T, C_T, C_T, DC_C, DC_T, CT_T, CN, CN_C are simplified than the old version dataset, which shows the importance of translation of legal discourses in plain English. The study results show that the newest edition of the UK corpus (UK 2006) contains 270,597 words, whilst the Hong Kong version contains 210,902 words, making it the largest in the world.
The new version of UK company law shows a significant difference in syntactic complexity. Table 2 shows that the results comprised two phases, the version of UK1985 and UK2006. The old version is more complex than the new version presented in 2006. Out of fourteen features of syntactic complexity, only two features such as MLC, i.e., 119.73 and CN_C, which is 119.01, show no difference. The other twelve features in the written forms of company laws are found to be significantly different from each other. For example, MLS, MLT, CS, VPT, CT, DC_C, DC_T, TS, CT_T, CP_T, CP_C, and CN_T are more straightforward than the old version of company law. The value of p is found to be more significant in two cases MLC (p = 0.961 > than p = 0.005) and CN_C (0.9, which is more significant than 0.005).
Figure 2 shows the overall comparison of Z-score in the HK, Mainland and UK company laws corpora. The figure shows that the Hong Kong company law results reveal that comparing the old and new versions HK corpus, the two key features, such as MLC, C_S, C_T and CT_T, are found to be simpler than the version of the new one (Cap32). On the contrary, the feature T_S remains different, and Cap 32 is significantly different from the old version of company law, 50.38.
Unlike the other two datasets, the mainland dataset is quite the opposite of all syntactic features. Results show that the old version of company law shows MLC, CP_T, and CP_C are only simpler versions. However, the remaining features, such as MLS, MLT, CS, VP_T, C_T, DC_C, and T_S, are complex syntactic features. Whereas the new version mainland has variations, e.g., MLS, MLT, CS, VP_T, C_T, DC_C, and T_S are more straightforward than the other features such as MLC, CP_T, and CP_C. The comparison is shown in Fig. 3.
Table 3 shows differences across three regions and different forms of company law corpora as the statistics show a significant difference in Hong Kong company law between the old and new versions. Whiteman (2000) highlights how the scientific community is increasingly emphasizing plain English communication with the non-scientific public and amongst scientists from other fields to improve the understanding of scientific discoveries by the general public, (MacCormick, 1998).
Discussion
As was just mentioned, the primary objectives of this investigation were as follows: Investigating both translated and untranslated versions of legal texts was the initial goal of this project. The second step is to determine what, in terms of accessibility, has changed since the beginning of the movement toward using plain language. Many studies suggest that legal language deviates quite heavily from plain English and has been and will continue to be more challenging to understand than standard English. This is in line with common intuition and plain-language advocates, as well as recent findings regarding private legal documents (Martinez et al., 2022; Martinez et al., 2022; Jiang et al., 2019; Yan, 2013), which suggest that the language of private legal documents is difficult to understand, (Martinez et al., 2022, p. 13; Lastres-López, 2019).
Overall, striking patterns emerge from the findings of the legal translation of the people of three regions in terms of syntactic complexity and legal communication in plain English. First, it has been noticed that ambiguous nominal and hypotactic structures contribute to a high number of propositions in each phrase, which requires a high level of cognitive processing from the text readers. Rink (2020) argues that ‘when people are addressed in this manner, the use of syntactic forms such as these is a barrier to their accessibility, (p. 117). The syntactic degree of hypotaxis and complicated phrase structures in all source texts is quite difficult. As a result, there is an extremely high level of information density, making it difficult for text users to process and exceed the processing capabilities of those with communication impairments (see Hansen-Schirra et al., 2020b; Gutermuth, 2020; Norris and Ortega, 2009; Ortega, 2003).
The study highlights the differences in the company law of the three regions regarding the syntactic complexity of legal translation. Therefore, based on the finding, there is a significant difference across the three areas in terms of syntactic complexity. Out of fourteen features, the UK and Hong Kong company laws are identified as more spartan than the mainland company law. Translation of legal documents makes the language understandable for the typical reader. However, people usually need help understanding legal terms or legal jargon (Fig. 4).
In addition, the results show that the UK is the Inner Circle and is responsible for establishing language standards. However, while following these new norms, it has been observed through the statistical analysis that a new version of norms is comparatively simplified and comprises plain English in legal drafting. On the contrary, Hong Kong, as a colony of the UK, has been impacted by the outer circle, but it still faces some of the influences of the Inner Circle.
The general questions underlying the analysis above were how the translated and non-translated legal texts as reflected in the company law differ across the three regions of China, Hong Kong and the UK and to what extent plain English helps the people understand legal communication. It is widely known that the present Plain English Movement advocates for legal papers to be simpler and more understandable to the common person. This study conforms that plain English helps people to understand the complex and ambiguous terms of legal discourse.
The study of Maaß & Rink (2021) asserts that “plain-language texts do not necessitate the employment of parallel standard text offers but can stand on their own and be read by all types of lay users in a context of expert-lay communication, (p. 13)”. This type of language is understandable to lay people and can help people with communication problems communicate more effectively. As a result, it may not have the action-enabling potential that is required for inclusion if it is only used as a basis for information retrieval. As a result of their familiar structure (both syntactic and lexical), simple writings assist many lay people in comprehending the linguistic intricacy of legal jargon (Adler, 2012; Asprey, 2010; Cheek, 2010; Cornelius, 2015; Dyer, 2017).
The trend of translating legal discourse made a tremendous change in legal communication. Such a movement started from the Inner Circle has also impacted countries and regions of the Outer Circle. When creating legislation, basic and uncomplicated vocabulary is used to ensure that the law is as precise and substantive as feasible without detracting from precision or substance (Law Drafting Division, 2012: p. 88). More specifically, it provides certain recommendations for crafting legislative text that is simple to comprehend. The impact of the Plain English Movement has also had an impact on the legal writing standards in Hong Kong, as previously stated. When compared to the United Kingdom, the Plain English Movement has made such an impact on Hong Kong that it has even gone as far as excessive. This tendency is supported by our results regarding the employment of conditioned grammatical constructions in this study.
In terms of syntactic level, the language of the Inner circle’s legal matters comprises complex phrase structures, more particularly, complex nominal phrases and complex hypotaxis. Such structure remains outside of the approach of users of the Outer circle with communication impairments (Gutermuth, 2020). Hansen-Schirra et al. (2020a) also explain that the language of the Inner circle includes a high share of complex syntactic structures that are typical for legal expert-expert communication. Therefore, the translation of companies’ law removes the risk for unsuccessful interaction with users who are laypersons in the Outer Circle and Inner circle.
At region levels, there were significant differences between Hong Kong, Mainland, and UK in the translation. However, the findings for Hong Kong are primarily indicative of the differences because of the adaptation of plain English for legal communication, which enables lay people to understand the complexity of sentences, phrases, or even technical terms of companies’ laws.
Regarding RQ1 and RQ2, our findings suggest that the plain English movement has understandable norms for layman language users. Bonsall et al. (2017) argue that plain English writing exists, but language researchers generally describe plain English as a way to use language to communicate information to the reader effectively, (Frade, 2012, 2016; Navarro and Rodríguez, 2014). Overall, the evidence from Tables 2 and 3 illustrate that sentences are packed with too much legal jargon, which can be hard to understand. In addition, these sentences often contain excessive jargon and legalese, and syntactic complexity measures of companies’ laws of Hong Kong region (Outer Circle) are found simpler and less complex than Mainland.
The findings of this study show several implications for syntactic complexity research; the results of the comparative analysis of legal translations of the three regions differed in many ways. Remarkably, the legal translation of Hong Kong and China significantly differed. The UK’s plain English movement helps people understand the complexity of legal discourses. These differences indicate that the translation experience of legal laws of companies enhances the understanding level and improves communication performance. Secondly, the results revealed that MLC, CP_T, and CP_C are only simpler versions. However, the remaining features, such as MLS, MLT, CS, VP_T, C_T, DC_C, and T_S, are complex in terms of syntactic features. Whereas the new version mainland has variations, e.g., MLS, MLT, CS, VP_T, C_T, DC_C, and T_S are simpler than the other features such as MLC, CP_T, and CP_C. Based on the results of HK company laws, the study suggests that China’s company should be translated into English to make the accessibility of laws to ordinary people.
Conclusion
The study investigated the translated and non-translated legal text while applying the theoretical underpinning of syntactic complexity and plain English movement with a particular focus on whether, as a result of the beginning of the plain-language movement, legal language becomes easier to understand for the general public. So, in terms of research question 1, the communicative and functional importance of syntactic complexity has expanded from the horizons of L2 writing. Multilingual writers must develop linguistically, function in instructional contexts well and respond appropriately to the different demands of valued genres, tasks, and contents that comprise their varied educational experience. Using a corpus of company laws carefully sampled, this study examined the differences in emerging legal translation of three regions’ engagement with syntactic complexity.
Our analysis revealed significant differences between Hong Kong and China regions concerning the syntactic complexity of different syntactic features. The study concludes that there have been efforts made to simplify the language in the UK and Hong Kong, and there have even been regulations integrated into law in both legal systems to ensure the simplicity of the legal language so that it could be understandable for lay people. Despite these efforts, it is still difficult for a layperson to understand it, and the reason for this is the complexity of the law as a whole. For example, it is only sometimes feasible to record a precise definition of a legal term in a way that makes it plain and avoids ambiguity.
In addition, the study highlights that the Hong Kong version of the legal text is simpler than the mainland legal texts, which ultimately confirms that plain English helps people comprehend legal jargon easily. Eagleson (2014) claims that ‘Plain English is a supportive movement which is simple and straightforward, and it uses only as many words as are essential. It is the language that avoids obscurity, an exaggerated vocabulary, and a complex sentence-construction structure. In no way does it resemble baby speak or a simplified form of the English Language. The use of plain English allows writers to focus their audience’s attention on the message rather than getting sidetracked by sophisticated terminology. As a result, they ensure that their target audience receives the message without difficulty (p. 23).
Finally, the study recommends that researchers use syntactic complexity measures when studying the implications for clarity in firms’ legal discourse. At the same time, our archival evidence suggests that, in certain instances, quantity-based readability measures may also help explain specific outcomes for understanding legal jargon in the regions of the outer circle. Further work into the validity of these theories could give insight into how effectively to persuade legislators to integrate the results of our and similar studies and help ease the mismatch between the ubiquity and implausibility of legal texts in the modern period.
Data availability
The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
References
Adler M (2012) The plain language movement. In: Tiersma PM, Solan L (ed.) The Oxford handbook of language and law. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 67–83
Afzaal M (2022) Critical perspectives on digitization of translation: challenges and opportunities, critical arts, https://doi.org/10.1080/02560046.2022.2138930
Al-Jabr AF (2006) Effect of syntactic complexity on translating from/into English/Arabic. Babel 52(3):203–221. https://doi.org/10.1075/babel.52.3.01alj
Ansarifar A, Shahriari H, Pishghadam R (2018) Phrasal complexity in academic writing: A comparison of abstracts written by graduate students and expert writers in applied linguistics. Journal of English for Academic Purposes 31:58–71
Asprey M (2010) Plain Language for Lawyers 4th Edition. Sydney: The Federation Press
Biber D, Johansson S, Leech G, Conrad S, Finegan E, Quirk R (1999) Longman grammar of spoken and written English (Vol. 2). London: Longman
Biel Ł (2014) Lost in the Eurofog: the textual fit of translated law. Stud Lang Cult Soc (series) 62(3):648. https://doi.org/10.7202/1043956ar
Biel Ł (2015) Phraseological profiles of legislative genres: complex prepositions as a special case of legal phrasemes in EU law and national law. Fachsprache 37(3-4):139–160. https://doi.org/10.24989/fs.v37i3-4.1286
Biel Ł (2017) Researching legal translation: multi-perspective and mixed-method framework for legal translation. Revista de Llengua i Dret 68:76–88. https://doi.org/10.2436/rld.i68.2017.2967
Biel Ł (2018) Corpora in institutional legal translation: small steps and the big picture. In: Prieto Ramos F (ed.) Institutional translation for international governance: enhancing quality in multi lingual legal communication. Bloomsbury, London, pp. 25–36
Biel Ł (2021) Eurolects and EU legal translation. In: Ji M, Laviosa S (ed.) The Oxford handbook of translation and social practices. Oxford University Press, Oxford, p. 479
Biel Ł, Engberg J, Martín Ruano MR, Sosoni V (2019) Introduction to research methods in legal translation and interpreting: Crossing methodological boundaries. In: Biel L(ed) Research methods in legal translation and interpreting. Routledge, London, pp. 1–12
Biel Ł (2016) Mixed corpus design for researching the Eurolect: a genre-based comparable-parallel corpus in the PL EUROLECT project, CeON
Biel Ł, Engberg J, Ruano RM, Sosoni V (Eds.) (2019) Research methods in legal translation and interpreting: crossing methodological boundaries. Routledge
Bolton T (2009) The empire of Cnut the Great: conquest and the consolidation of power in Northern Europe in the early eleventh century. Brill
Bonsall IV SB, Leone AJ, Miller BP, Rennekamp K (2017) A plain English measure of financial reporting readability. Journal of Accounting and Economics 63(2-3):329–357
Bulté B, Housen A (2012) Defining and operationalizing L2 complexity. In: Housen A (ed.) Dimensions of L2 performance and proficiency. complexity, accuracy and fluency in SLA.Benjamins Pub. Co., Amsterdam, pp. 21–46
Cao D (2013) Legal translation studies. In: Millán C (ed.) The Routledge handbook of translation studies. Routledge, London, pp. 415–424
Cheek A (2010) Defining plain language. Clarity 64:5–15
Chesterman A (1993) From ‘is’ to ‘ought’: laws, norms and strategies in translation studies. Int J Transl Stud 5(1):1–20. https://doi.org/10.1075/target.5.1.02che
Chesterman A (2000) A causal model for translation studies. In: Maeve O (ed.) Intercultural faultlines: research models in translation studies1: textual and cognitive aspects. St. Jerome, Manchester, pp. 15–27
Cornelius E (2015) Defining ‘plain language’ in contemporary South Africa. Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics 44:1–18
Dullion V (2022) When was co-drafting “invented”? On history and concepts in Legal Translation Studies. Perspectives, studies in translatology, 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1080/0907676X.2022.2105156
Dyer CR (2017) Chapter seven a cognitive linguistics approach to plain language translations. Cognitive Approaches to Specialist Languages, 150
Eagleson R (2014) Short definition of plain language. Improving communication from the federal government to the public. https://www.plainlanguage.gov/about/definitions/short-definition/
Frade C (2012) The power of legal conditionals in international contracts. In: Frade C (ed.) Transparency, power and control: perspectives on legal communication. Routledge, London, pp. 45–64
Frade C (2016) The power of legal conditionals in international contracts. In: Transparency, power, and control: perspectives on legal communication, Routledge. pp. 31–50
Giczela-Pastwa J (2019) Inverse legal translation: a corpus-driven study of multi-word units related to the structure of translated statutory provisions. In: Biel L (ed) Research methods in legal translation and interpreting. Routledge, London, pp. 48–65
Gutermuth S (2020) Leichte Sprache für alle? Eine zielgruppenorientierte Rezeptionsstudie zu Leichter und Einfacher Sprache. Berlin: Frank & Timme, Print
Hansen-Schirra S, Bisang W, Nagels A, Gutermuth S, Fuchs J, Borghardt L, ... & Sommer J (2020a) Intralingual translation into Easy Language–or how to reduce cognitive processing costs. Easy Language Research: Text and User Perspectives. Berlin: Frank & Timme 197–225
Hansen-Schirra S, Nitzke J, Gutermuth S, MAAß, C. H. R. I. S. T. I. A. N. E., Rink I (2020b) Technologies for translation of specialised texts into easy language. Easy Language Research: Text and User Perspectives. Berlin: Frank & Timme, 99–127
Jiang J, Bi P, Liu H (2019) Syntactic complexity development in the writings of EFL learners: Insights from a dependency syntactically-annotated corpus. J Second Lang Writ 46:100666. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2019.100666
Kachru BB (1985) “Standards, Codification and Sociolinguistic Realism: The English Language in the Outer Circle.” English in the World: Teaching and Learning the Language and Literatures. Eds Randolph Quirk and Henry Widdowson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 11–30
Lastres-López C (2019) Conditionals in spoken courtroom and parliamentary discourse in English, French, and Spanish. Corpus-based research on variation in English legal discourse, 51–78. https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.91.03las
Laviosa S (2002) Corpus-based translation studies: theory, findings, applications (Vol. 17). Rodopi
Law Drafting Division (2012) https://ial-online.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/05_law_drafting_e.pdf
Li K, Wang Y (2013) Comparative studies on introductory words of conditional clauses in Hong Kong ordinances. Chinese Science & Technology Translators, 26(2):31–35
Liu K, Afzaal M (2021) Syntactic complexity in translated and non-translated texts: A corpus-based study of simplification. PLoS ONE 16(6):e0253454–e0253454. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253454
Lu X (2010) Automatic analysis of syntactic complexity in second language writing. Int J Corpus Linguist 15(4):474–496. https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.15.4.02lu
Lu X (2011) A corpus‐based evaluation of syntactic complexity measures as indices of college‐level ESL writers' language development. TESOL quarterly 45(1):36–62
Lu X (2017) Automated measurement of syntactic complexity in corpus-based L2 writing research and implications for writing assessment. Lang Test 34(4):493–511. https://doi.org/10.1177/0265532217710675
Lu X, Casal JE, Liu Y (2020) The rhetorical functions of syntactically complex sentences in social science research article introductions. J English Acad Purp 44:100832–16. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeap.2019.100832
Maaß C, Rink I (2021) Translating legal texts into easy language. J. Open Access L., 9, 1. Link: https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/jopacc9&div=4&id=&page=
MacCormick N (1998) Legal reasoning and interpretation. In: Edward C (ed.) Routledge encyclopedia of philosophy (Volume 5). Routledge, London, pp. 525–531
Mancilla E, Valenzuela J, Escobar M (2015) Rendimientoen las pruebas “Timed Up and Go” y “Estación Unipodal” en adultos mayoreschilenos entre 60 y 89 años. Revista médica de Chile, 143(1):39–46
Martinez E, Mollica F, Gibson E (2022) So much for plain language: an analysis of the accessibility of United States federal laws (1951–2009). Available at SSRN 4036863
Mattila HE (2016) Comparative legal linguistics: language of law, Latin and modern lingua francas. Routledge, London
McClain JB, Mancilla-Martinez J, Flores I, Buckley L (2021) Translanguaging to support emergent bilingual students in English dominant preschools: An explanatory sequential mixed-method study. Bilingual Research Journal 44(2):158–173
McNamara T (2014) 30 years on—Evolution or revolution? Language Assessment Quarterly 11(2):226–232. https://doi.org/10.1080/15434303.2014.895830
Navarro PE, Rodríguez JL (2014) Deontic logic and legal systems. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Norris JM, Ortega L (2009) Towards an organic approach to investigating CAF in instructed SLA: the case of complexity. Appl Linguist 30(4):555–578. https://doi.org/10.1093/applin/amp044
Ortega L (2003) Syntactic complexity measures and their relationship to L2 proficiency: a research synthesis of college‐level L2 writing. Appl Linguist 24(4):492–518. https://doi.org/10.1093/applin/24.4.492
Pallotti G (2015) A simple view of linguistic complexity. Second Lang Res 31(1):117–134. https://doi.org/10.1177/0267658314536435
Pontrandolfo G (2011) Phraseology in criminal judgments: a corpus study of original vs. translated Italian. Sendebar: Boletín de La E.U.T.I. de Granada 22(22):209–234
Prieto Ramos F, Cerutti G (2022) Terminological hybridity in institutional legal translation: A corpus-driven analysis of keygenres of EU and international law. Terminology, 1–33. https://doi.org/10.1075/term.21047.pri
Rink I (2020) Rechtskommunikation und Barrierefreiheit: Zur Übersetzung juristischer Informations- und Interaktionstexte in Leichte Sprache. Berlin: Frank & Timme
Song L, Gildea D, Zhang Y, Wang Z, Su J (2019) Semantic neural machine translation using AMR. Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics 7:19–31
Tiersma P (2008) The nature of legal language. In: Gibbons J, Turell MT (ed.) Dimensions of forensic linguistics. Johnson Benjamins, Amsterdam/Philadelphia, pp. 7–26
Toury G (1995) Descriptive translation studies–and beyond. John Benjamins, Amsterdam
Trklja A (2017) A corpus investigation of formulaic and hybridity in legal language: a case of EU case law texts. In: Stanislaw G (ed.) Phraseology in legal and institutional settings. Routledge, London, pp. 89–108
Whiteman (2000) Signs of intelligible life. Sci Career. Retrieved from: http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/career_magazine/previous_issues/articles/2000_11_24/nodoi.3947963619245338704>
Wu S, Wang X, Wang L, Liu F, Xie J, Tu Z, ... & Li M (2020) Tencent neural machine translation systems for the WMT20 news translation task. In Proceedings of the Fifth Conference on Machine Translation (pp. 313–319)
Xiao R, Hu X (2015) Corpus-based studies of translational Chinese in English-Chinese translation. Springer Berlin, Heidelberg
Yan LKW (2013) Comparative studies on introductory words of conditional clauses in Hong Kong ordinances. Chin Sci Technol Translat J 41:1–18
Yin S, Gao Y, Lu X (2021) Syntactic complexity of research article part-genres: Differences between emerging and expert international publication writers. System (Linköping) 97:102427. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.system.2020.102427
Yu Q (2021) An organic syntactic complexity measure for the Chinese language: the TC-unit. Appl Linguist 42(1):60–92. https://doi.org/10.1093/applin/amz064
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Ethical approval
This article does not contain any studies with human participants performed by any of the authors.
Informed consent
This article does not contain any studies with human participants performed by any of the authors.
Additional information
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Lin, X., Afzaal, M. & Aldayel, H.S. Syntactic complexity in legal translated texts and the use of plain English: a corpus-based study. Humanit Soc Sci Commun 10, 17 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-022-01485-x
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-022-01485-x
- Springer Nature Limited