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Henbaka (Offline)
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Posts: 472
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Tokyo
07-07-2008, 07:36 AM

Wow what a thread. I can't really add much..I do enjoy reading the many intelligent posts on here however.

Now I've only lived in Japan (saitama/Tokyo) for 4 months in total. So you may feel that I don't qualify to give any real insight. But here is my negative list:

* The price of meat. From what I experienced, it was kind of hard for me to get a decent piece of meat, to a decent price. Chicken was OK priced, and pork wasn't amazingly expensive, but cow meat I could almost never buy. My meat intake was mainly in Yoshinoya That might differ if you don't live in Tokyo though.

* Trains were crowded at certain times of the day. Altho this isn't such a big minus as they came so frickin' often. I would like some night trains though, so one didn't have to stay out 'til 6 every time. But I understand the purpose.

* Specialized restaurants not being very specialized. By that I mean that many of the italian or whatever restaurants I saw never had any italian people working there. This meant that the pasta (in this example) didn't seem very genuinely italian to me. Here in sweden it's not hard to get real genuine foreign food (for a decent price).

* The police. Maybe MMM or someone else more experienced than me will set me straight. But my experience of police in Japan was that they failed to act at the few occasions when I saw something happen. Whether it was a domestic disturbance at our guesthouse, or drunk 'gaijins' outside a bar, their work (as I saw it) was to me sub-par. Maybe some of it comes down to cultural differences, but in my view of the police anywhere a drunk guy trying to fight the police goes down before you can think to blink.


Quote:
Originally Posted by tommasi View Post
Sorry for the double post but another thing I want to emphasize is people's ability to speak the local tongue.
I run into to people who lived in Japan time to time and many of them act as if they are specialists and know everything about Japan.
I'm a nice guy so I won't challenge them and let them have it but I always ask them one question, "Do you speak Japanese?"
In many cases, people don't.
They think they do but in reality, they don't.
I can see why Japanese people want to ask foreigners every time whether they speak Japanese or not because not many people are fluent and the ones who are fluent are rare.
My advise is that before you claim yourselves as Japan experts, make sure to get JLPT1 or 2 and then people will take your words seriously.
I think I get your point, but just incase I don't;

You mean the bragging rude types of guys/women right? Because I think anyone really trying to learn a foreign language and speak it as best they can should get praise, and not put down because they didn't pass a test.


なんでやねん!

Last edited by Henbaka : 07-07-2008 at 07:39 AM.
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