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Archive for October, 2009

I don’t think little Suguru was talking about pants

engrish-pants

Sometimes it’s hilarious being a Japanese English teacher. Here is an essay from one of our special students, Suguro:

“Hello, my name is Suguru. I will talk about pants. We put it on everyday. I am putting on the boxer pants. Pants are important things. I get excited when girls’ pants are seen. Am I abnormal? Pants are man’s romances. Does the teacher like it? Thank you.”

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How can I make friends that are Japanese? By making them the same way they do

japanese-friends
After moving to Japan it is a good idea to try to make some friends, especially if you want to experience the city or improve your Japanese.  So how can we go about finding them?

Well, using English websites are mostly a hit or miss.  Sending out random messages and emails to Japanese people on facebook may look a little stalkerish too.

I would first suggest to search on facebook groups relating to meeting people in Japan, for example “Nagoya Japanese/English conversation club”, or something like that.  You can also try Mixi, which is basically the Japanese version of Facebook, located here.  The site is in Japanese, so if you can’t understand it, follow the how to join Mixi guide to register.

These things didn’t work for me, so I took a more unique approach.  Instead of searching Google for how to meet friends in English, I decided to search for its equivalent in Japanese.  Search for friends the same way the Japanese search for friends. But how do the Japanese say they want to meet new friends? Is it simply 新しい友達を作る (atarashii tomodachi o tsukuru) lit. “make new friends”? That search comes up with roughly 7 million results, but they’re no good.  The first result links to a yahoo answers type of site that asks the same question, with recommendations that are not so helpful in our case (like suggesting to meet new friends at work).

So let’s try Google again, and this time have the ’suggested searches’ list guide us.  Entering 友達 (tomodachi) friend in Google search comes up with a list of results seen here:

Google tomodachi search results.

Google tomodachi search results.

Are any of these useful? Let’s see…

1. 友達コレクション (tomodachi collection) Friends collection – Probably a video game since it shows up again down the list with a ‘ds’ next to it, not helpful.

2. 友達がいない (tomodachi ga inai) I have no friends – This doesn’t sound helpful, just depressing.

3. 友達の作り方 (tomodachi no tsukuru hou) How to make friends – A great try, but it only leads us to more yahoo answer type sites and sad blog posts.

4. 友達がいない 社会人 (tomodachi ga inai kaisya jin) I have no friends at work, or company men don’t have any friends – It either sounds like someone is sad that they have no friends at work, or they’re trying to find out if it’s really true that company men have no friends, probably due to little free time.

So far, none of these have been helpful.  So let’s try again. This time let’s try searching for ‘meeting foreigners’.  Typing 外国人と (gaikokujin to) foreigner in Google comes up with the suggestion 外国人と友達になる (gaikokujin to tomodachi ni naru) become a friend of foreign people.  It sounds like a great search term but again the results are blah.

One more try.  Enter 外国人友達 (gaikokujin tomodachi) foreigner friend and … bingo! Well, not exactly bingo but it’s more in the right direction.  A bunch of dating social sites come up, which I guess would be fine if you were single, but if that’s not the case then those sites might be a little risky.  We want REAL friends, not one-night friends, if you know what I mean…

After a few more searches I finally came across a networking site that was reasonable.  Excite Japan (You remember Excite, right? The same Excite from the earlier Internet days) has a friends section where you can meet new people.  The most useful part of the site is being able to search for people who live in the same location as you do.  It’s just what we were looking for, but a major flaw is that you can’t see the picture of the person you want to contact.  You can search for people in your location to meet, but to see what they look like you must ask for their picture first.  Here is the link: Excite friends.  I’m sure they’ll be very surprised when they see a foreigner wants to contact them.

Excite friends isn’t perfect, but it’s just one good one I’ve found so far.  Do you know of any?  Please let us know by leaving a comment.

How to Meet Japanese Friends, the short version.

Make friends the way the Japanese do.

1. Search for “how to make friends” or “friend making site” in Japanese instead of English, to see what sites they use and join them.

2. Join Mixi or other Japanese social networks instead of the primarily North American Myspace/Facebook.

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The best book to begin learning Japanese is JSL: Japanese the Spoken Language

Without a doubt, the best book to begin learning Japanese is JSL: The Spoken Language, by Noda and Jordan.  This book is the official Japanese school book of the Cornell and Ohio State University Japanese programs, and presents Japanese learning in an easy and efficient way.

The book simplifies the Japanese language and breaks it down into 4 simple parts: verbs, nouns, adjectivals, and sentence particles.  In each chapter the student is to memorize a set dialogue between two people, along with vocabulary that can be replaced within that dialogue.  In this way students learn grammar by remembering the structure of the sentences.

The book is available on Amazon and at a great price for what it’s worth.  If you’re beginning Japanese, or studying on your own, JSL The Spoken Language is definitely the best way to go.

link: Japanese: The Spoken Language (Part 1)



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The Japanese have been following American police officers and taking pictures

This is a picture of an American police officer enjoying lunch on his designated lunch break (we hope).   At first he had only one set menu, but when a Japanese camera crew spotted him they were generous enough to share their order.

japan-american-police

So what do you think? Is this a poor portrayal of the American police force or a good depiction?

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In Response to the Question: “Why Do Japanese Girls Walk like Retards?”

Someone the other day came to this blog looking for the term “why japanese girls walk like retards”.  This statement is so juicy that I had to give it its very own post.

To be politically correct, let’s just admit right now that it is wrong to make fun of mentally challenged people, and that they are no less important than any other person.  I do agree that some Japanese girls walk silly or stupid, but those terms should not be associated with someone who is mentally challenged.

Ok now, back to those girls.   Yes, I did notice when I came to Japan that some girls walk very odd.  I find it kind of funny when girls think they’re looking their best when actually they look like a goof.  Japanese girls are no exception.

Japanese girls really trying hard to look cool.

Japanese girls trying really hard to look cool.

So what’s the deal? What’s the problem? Maybe the boots.  And the high heels.  Those boot things are really popular in Japan, it seems like almost every trendy girl is in to those.  High heels though, I’ve seen less but they’re still worn.  In Korea, it’s a different story.  Girls there wear high heels at all times and for all occasions, but most of them don’t walk funny, so our question is still not resolved.

Beware Japanese girls, take two of these and walk silly in the morning.

Beware Japanese girls, take two of these and walk silly in the morning.

Japanese girls are smaller than Korean girls, and on average Japanese girls are more overweight than Korean.  Hence this is where the problem lies.  I think the combination of short legs/thick legs/crazy boots or high heels leads to some Japanese girls walking funny.  The average Japanese girl is small and these days has thick legs (thanks to McDonalds and almost everything being fried), so all you have to do is throw in the addition of high heels or boots and BAM!  Japanese girls walk silly.

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Japanese Part Time Work Ad Kanji Quiz

Here is the cover of an ad booklet looking for students to fill in part time and full time work positions.

A Japanese part-time ad booklet.

A Japanese part-time ad booklet.

Can you read and understand the following kana and kanji?

japanese-part-time-ad-highlights

Here are the answers:

1. シゴト or 仕事 = work, a job
2. 学生 or がくせい = student
3. ライフスタイル = lifestyle

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War of the Worlds Kanji Quiz

Can you read this Japanese DVD cover?

japanese-war-of-the-worlds

Original image

Now try to figure out the Japanese in the square boxes:

japanese-war-of-the-worlds-kanji

Answer:  War of the Worlds Japanese

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What is the Most Difficult Kanji, even for Japanese People?

Japanese people know lots of kanji, but despite that there are still a few that can trip them up.  Perhaps the most difficult kanji to learn is also one that has a lot of strokes, the kanji which means incidentally “gloom” or “depression”.  It has a whopping 29 strokes.  When you see it on the monitor you can’t really identify it, it just looks like a small square of black mess.

Here is the kanji: 鬱

The most difficult kanji.

The most difficult kanji.

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Sexy Japanese Model Aya Kiguchi Photos and Wallpapers

Here are some great pictures and wallpaper of sexy Japanese model Aya Kiguchi.

aya-kiguchi

aya-kiguchi-2

aya-kiguchi-sexy

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The Most Disturbing Game Ever

most-disturbing-game-ever

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