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BA Modern Languages, Translation and Interpreting
About this course
Modern languages, translation, and interpreting is a discipline that sits at the intersection of linguistic expertise and professional communication. Translators and interpreters do not simply convert words from one language to another; they convey meaning across cultural and linguistic systems that structure ideas, values, and experiences in different ways, requiring deep knowledge of both the source and target languages alongside a thorough understanding of the contexts in which communication takes place. The language services industry has grown substantially as global business, international organisations, legal systems, and healthcare services have come to depend on accurate, culturally informed communication across language boundaries. At Swansea University, this full-time, three-year programme prepares you for a profession in which technological change is transforming both the tools available and the skills required. You will study modern languages with a focus on translation and interpreting practice, developing the linguistic precision and cultural understanding that professional language work demands. The programme engages with the latest language technologies, including machine translation and computer-assisted translation tools, equipping you to work in a profession that increasingly requires practitioners who can use technology effectively while applying human judgement where it matters most. The typical entry tariff is 120 UCAS points. Graduates from modern languages, translation, and interpreting programmes work as professional translators, conference interpreters, community interpreters, localisation specialists, and language consultants across a wide range of sectors. International organisations, legal and medical settings, the public sector, multinational companies, and the media all depend on skilled language professionals. The technical skills developed in the programme are also relevant to roles in language technology, computational linguistics, and natural language processing. Many graduates pursue postgraduate study or professional training in translation, interpreting, or applied linguistics, while others move directly into the profession in their chosen language combination.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (94% response rate)
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