The Broken Telephone Changes Tone: Examining Nuanced Linguistic Cues in LLM Chains-of-Translation

Quang Minh Nguyen, Maida Aizaz, Braahmi Padmakumar


Abstract
As LLM-generated content proliferates online, texts are increasingly subject to repeated processing and translation by models, making it critical to understand how such iterative reprocessing reshapes language. Prior work has shown that this degrades factual content and reduces diversity, but the fine-grained linguistic shifts underlying these effects remain unexplored. We track changes in epistemic markers, grammatical voice, degree adverbs, and nominalisation density across 12 iterations of round-trip translation applied to 600 BBC News articles, varying intermediate language, translation model, and chain topology across 17 experimental configurations. We find a consistent epistemic shift: evidential and factive markers increase while hedges decline, potentially causing tentative claims to read as more certain. Concurrently, texts undergo register-level formalisation—informal degree adverbs give way to formal alternatives, active-voice density drops, by-phrase passives attrite disproportionately, and nominalisation density rises. We also record clear model-specific patterns for certain settings. These shifts erode the markers of source, register, and agency, offering a fine-grained account of the factual degradation reported in previous studies.
Anthology ID:
2026.mellm-1.29
Volume:
Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Multilinguality in the Era of Large Language Models (MeLLM 2026)
Month:
July
Year:
2026
Address:
San Diego, United States
Editors:
Kaiyu Huang, Fengran Mo, Pinzhen Chen, Meng Jiang
Venues:
MeLLM | WS
SIG:
Publisher:
Association for Computational Linguistics
Note:
Pages:
294–307
Language:
URL:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-acl-workshops/2026.mellm-1.29/
DOI:
Bibkey:
Cite (ACL):
Quang Minh Nguyen, Maida Aizaz, and Braahmi Padmakumar. 2026. The Broken Telephone Changes Tone: Examining Nuanced Linguistic Cues in LLM Chains-of-Translation. In Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Multilinguality in the Era of Large Language Models (MeLLM 2026), pages 294–307, San Diego, United States. Association for Computational Linguistics.
Cite (Informal):
The Broken Telephone Changes Tone: Examining Nuanced Linguistic Cues in LLM Chains-of-Translation (Nguyen et al., MeLLM 2026)
Copy Citation:
PDF:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-acl-workshops/2026.mellm-1.29.pdf