As I biked to work the other day, I was spinning out an imaginary conversation in another language, as one does, this time in Spanish because it had been a while -- and I found myself stumbling not just out of rustiness, which I expected, but because I kept reaching for methods of indicating politeness that aren't there. "No, all you have is Usted," I had to tell myself. "The verbs stay the same." (Or rather, "No -- Usted solamente. Verbos, ah, quedan lo mismo. ... quedan? estan? ¡ay ... !") It's been a while since I've had a language collision with Japanese. It fact, it's been very rare compared to learning European languages.
Español no es Japonés. Mata, Nihongo wa Supaingo ja nai yo -- or in that politeness form I wanted to use, Nihongo wa Supaingo de wa arimasen.
May you all have a safe and happy Passover -- just watch out for wayward angels.
---L.
Español no es Japonés. Mata, Nihongo wa Supaingo ja nai yo -- or in that politeness form I wanted to use, Nihongo wa Supaingo de wa arimasen.
May you all have a safe and happy Passover -- just watch out for wayward angels.
---L.
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Date: 25 March 2013 08:58 pm (UTC)España no es Japón, por bueno o por malo. But we eat a lot of seafood here anyway, especially during Semana Santa. Watch out for wayward people in pointy hats and long robes.
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Date: 25 March 2013 09:31 pm (UTC)Ah -- sí, es mejor. Gracias. Es dificil, Español, después de muchos años.
And practicing on telenovelas only works when I, yanno, actually watch them.
---L.
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Date: 25 March 2013 09:47 pm (UTC)Practice with http://www.rtve.es/television/
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Date: 26 March 2013 08:06 am (UTC)(I just wrote that out without recourse to a dictionary, so a couple of my words may be on the invented side.)
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Date: 26 March 2013 02:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 26 March 2013 05:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 26 March 2013 06:15 pm (UTC)---L.