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It is very important that we transcribe and translate all jobs VERBATIM. We are educating our clients on this policy. We type all Spanish jobs as they are dictated. It is SpeakWrite policy that we do not alter, edit or change the content of any Spanish Interview. 

This warning is listed in the Quality Standards with Quality Warnings for Spanish Jobs

Warning
title

Verbatim Policy

Spanish jobs are to be typed verbatim. This applies to the transcription as well as the translation of Spanish Interviews. 

Your work will be reviewed for the accuracy of the transcription as well as the English translation. It will be required that audited jobs meet our standard of less than 5% error rate for non-proofread jobs and less than 3% error rate on proofread jobs. That being said, translation and voice-recognition software is strictly prohibited. Your contract with SpeakWrite will be at risk if you use any software other than SpeakWrite's TypeEasy and Microsoft Word to do any job

. Please see the examples below to familiarize yourself with this policy. 

. For more information on error rates, click here.

Below is an example of how to transcribe and translate audio verbatim:

Audio

Verbatim Spanish/English

Translation

Ya, So, ¿tú sabes que paso el, la, hace un mes? ¿viernes?

Ya, So, ¿tú sabes que paso el, la, hace un mes? ¿viernes?

Ya, So, do you know the,  what happened the, a month ago? Friday?

Do not forget to add exactly the words as he/she said:

The example above the officer said "YA" he never said "YEAH". So, we can’t fix his/her words and since "YA" is not a word to be translated we DO NOT FIX the translation on the English side and we leave it AS IT IS.

Then the officer

as

asks the question and he stutters and uses

EL

“EL,

LA ( that will be

LA” ( this is very common

that with

in most

of

audios. The Officers are making an effort to speak SPANISH but we do need to remember to translate those stutters. )

Example 2

Other Verbatim Policies:

 AudioVerbatim Spanish/EnglishTranslation  /  INCORRECT  per SpeakWrite policies El se llama Pitufo.

El se llama Pitufo.

His name is Smurf.(warning)

Note

We NEVER translate nicknames. See the

above

below example. We may be familiar with some characters, or common nicknames but we do not know that these nicknames can be translated. Nicknames should be treated as regular names per our policies. We leave the nickname as it is in Spanish when we type it on the translation side.

Audio

Verbatim Spanish/English

(thumbs down)Translation  /  INCORRECT  per SpeakWrite policies 

El se llama Pitufo.

El se llama Pitufo.

(thumbs down)His name is Smurf.

Audio

Verbatim Spanish/English

(thumbs up)Translation  / CORRECT per SpeakWrite policies

El se llama Pitufo.

El se llama Pitufo.

(thumbs up)His name is Pitufo.

Mixed Spanish and English Policy

If a speaker mixes English and Spanish words in the Spanish portion of an interview, transcribe it as is (verbatim).  Do not correct the broken Spanish and then translate that into English. 

CLIENT SAYS:

VERBATIM  PORTION

ENGLISH PORTION

Tú te acuerdas de lo que paso ayer como a las.  Was it 5:50 in the morning?

Tú te acuerdas de lo que paso ayer como a las.  Was it 5:50 in the morning?

Do you remember what happened yesterday around, was it 5:50 in the morning?

Info

Recorded/automated voices should be formatted in bold.


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