NotePD Loader
Ideas Post

10 things about Japan or Japanese I learned or was exposed to recently

    1. The Boyfriend

    A reality TV show on Netflix about a bunch of single gay guys living in a house.

    And you know what?

    It's fucking good.

    2. Love is Blind: Japan

    I didn't finish the first episode yet but I quite liked it.

    3. People might switch between different levels of formality even with the same people

    My understanding is that in Japanese, verbs change depending on the politeness/formality level. There is casual, polite, extremely polite, and humble, I think? I only recently started dabbling so I'm not too sure of what I'm saying.

    Anyway, so with a close friend you'll probably use the casual way to talk, but with a stranger you'll use the polite way, and when you talk about yourself humbly you'll use the humble way, or something like that. And the very polite way (honorific I think?) with a professor or something? But I was watching The Boyfriend with a Japanese girl, and I asked her what form the guys used. She said it depends. So I guess maybe when someone is like "I would like to invite you to do this with me" they might use the humble or polite form or something? I don't know!

    4. "Nani?" means "What?"

    But I just saw a video about this a few days after learning it, and apparently it depends (of course).

    5. The Okinawa islands is like the Hawaii of Japan

    I used to think Okinawa was a city. It's the name of the main island of the Okinawa islands.

    6. Watashi wa tabemasu = I eat

    You don't pronounce the 'u'.

    7. Depending on the intonation of "hashi", it can mean either bridge or chopsticks

    And "ashi" is leg, which I found out later.

    8. Japanese has what they call "pitch accent" (which is involved in the "hashi" thing)

    From what I heard, it's not super duper important or at least it's not nearly as big a deal as tones in Chinese.

    9. In Japan, the woman is expected to pour more sake when the man's glass is empty

    10. Japanese people rarely say "no" and would rather use euphemisms like "I'll think about it"

0 Like.0 Comment
Comment
Branch
Repost
Like
Profile
chris407x like the post
Comment
Branch
Like
0
5468
0
0
Comments (0)

No comments.