Why is olympic announcement in french




















Article 23 of the Olympic Charter specifies that French and English are the official languages of the games. In fact, the charter suggests French has standing over English. French usage has been slipping in recent Olympics. It seemed to have disappeared altogether three years ago in Rio de Janeiro. Signage in French was nowhere. Interestingly, according to Rule 23 [correction] of the Olympic Charter, French is an official IOC language, alongside English, but should a discrepancy between a French text and an English one occur in any IOC document, the French text prevails, so in many ways it is the most important official Olympic language.

The Olympics, like most businesses, operates in a multi-lingual world where discrepancies are bound to occur. Considering translation or interpretation services from Rapport International? Get started today! Rapport International provides written translation, spoken interpretation and multilingual communication services for local and global companies.

What makes them different? Search Rapport International. The host city also goes to great lengths to try to minimise language barriers for international visitors.

On the streets, signage appears in different languages to try to avoid traffic accidents and confusion, whilst many restaurants supply translated menus to try to make it easier for customers to order. The goal of the Olympics is to help build a better, more peaceful world through sport, and language is a vital component of that.

Now you know what the three official languages of the Tokyo Olympics are, keep an ear out for the French, English and Japanese commentary the next time you tune in to watch the Aussies bring home Gold!

Skip to content Contact Blog. Tokyo Olympics: the universal language of sport.



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