English Accent
I went to a pub with a friend and one of the guys there was trying to help me find something nonalcoholic to drink. Well, he recommended the "Kodomono Cider".
I should take a moment to tell you that Japanese has tonal patterns in every word that help you to figure what the other person is saying, since they don't really believe in spaces in either writing or speech, and it wouldn't be a stretch to say that they have more homophones than some languages have discrete words. In writing, you have Chinese characters (kanji) to "assist" you in figuring out what's going on.
In speech, if someone says hashi, there are three possible meanings: "bridge", "chopsticks", and "edge". Now, this seems like it could be really confusing if you happened to be eating while walking over a bridge, but the Japanese have two ways of solving this:
So, back to the cider I got. What it was was "child's beer", or こどものビール (kodomo no biiru). When the guy said this, though, he said kodomono, with a flat accent on the whole thing, which says to me a brand name or something. I think he also transposed two syllables at one point and said komodono, and I couldn't help picturing him trying to get massive lizards to drink for the rest of the night.
Now, that looks pretty confusing, and I wrote it, so to recap:
Having the space there tells when written in roman characters will make you subconsciously pronounce it differently. Try reading it out loud and I think you'll see what I mean. What you should hear is that you, as an English speaker (presumably, anybody who's reading this also speaks English), naturally place the stress accent in a certain place. The Japanese language has something similar with tones - though I still have a pretty strong American-sounding stress accent.*
Okay, class dismissed!
*Americans are, from what I've heard, well-known for saying waTAshi or WAtashi instead of the volume-flat watashi, and killing other words in a similar manner. Now class is dismissed.
I should take a moment to tell you that Japanese has tonal patterns in every word that help you to figure what the other person is saying, since they don't really believe in spaces in either writing or speech, and it wouldn't be a stretch to say that they have more homophones than some languages have discrete words. In writing, you have Chinese characters (kanji) to "assist" you in figuring out what's going on.
In speech, if someone says hashi, there are three possible meanings: "bridge", "chopsticks", and "edge". Now, this seems like it could be really confusing if you happened to be eating while walking over a bridge, but the Japanese have two ways of solving this:
- Never eating while performing any kind of locomotion. Bad, bad, naughty.
- Tone patterns!
So, back to the cider I got. What it was was "child's beer", or こどものビール (kodomo no biiru). When the guy said this, though, he said kodomono, with a flat accent on the whole thing, which says to me a brand name or something. I think he also transposed two syllables at one point and said komodono, and I couldn't help picturing him trying to get massive lizards to drink for the rest of the night.
Now, that looks pretty confusing, and I wrote it, so to recap:
- kodomo no - "child's"
- kodomono - No meaning that I'm aware of, so I assumed it was a brand name. I don't really frequent bars, you know? Sounds like kudamono (fruit).
- komodono - Either a large lizard, or someone respected named "Komo". This style isn't used anymore, so...
Having the space there tells when written in roman characters will make you subconsciously pronounce it differently. Try reading it out loud and I think you'll see what I mean. What you should hear is that you, as an English speaker (presumably, anybody who's reading this also speaks English), naturally place the stress accent in a certain place. The Japanese language has something similar with tones - though I still have a pretty strong American-sounding stress accent.*
Okay, class dismissed!
*Americans are, from what I've heard, well-known for saying waTAshi or WAtashi instead of the volume-flat watashi, and killing other words in a similar manner. Now class is dismissed.
Labels: language
6 Comments:
So is that why people are nervous when speaking a foreign langauge...all the unexpected stress?
So it sounds like you eventually received the correct drink rather than some lizard thing, yes?
The point is that it's not stress. It's tone. Regardless of puns.
Yeah, I avoided lizards, as far as I know.
I suppose if lizards were in a smoothie-style drink you might never know what that extra bit of protein was...
Well, there's a whole new variation on probably-illegal animal activities. Lizard drinking contests. "I'll bet my lizard can drink more scotch than YOURS can!"
Before what? Spontaneous combustion?
Lizard blasting...the new alternative to fireworks. "Oh, see all the pretty colors sparkle and go flying through the air!"
Speaking of funny misunderstandings of language, when I first read your post I was tired and thought you wrote that it was child's bear instead of child's beer and I was going to make a comment on drinking teddy bears instead of lizards.
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