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YuriTokoro (Offline)
Busier Than Shinjuku Station
 
Posts: 1,066
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Kawasaki,Japan
04-20-2010, 02:32 PM

Hi.
Could you correct my English?
I'm sorry, this is very long.



"When speaking in English, why Japanese people get embarrassed?
"
-This is only my opinion. I’m so sorry, in advance!!!

I have been asked why some Japanese people get embarrassed when speaking in English. If you have talked with some Japanese people who are not very good at speaking English, you would agree with the question and say that you don’t expect Japanese people to speak English fluently. The answer is that “we are not embarrassed, but intimidated by you”. They dare to say “I’m embarrassed” because they are scared to say “You scare me.”
There are three major reasons.
1. When talking with people from foreign countries, many Japanese people get frustrated by rudimentary Japanese. So, most of us can’t help believing that we have to speak fluently when speaking in English.
2. The face seems to be very fierce when you say “What?”
3. People from foreign countries don’t seem to even try to understand what I mean.

The first reason:
Most Japanese people haven’t seen adults who speak in rudimentary Japanese. Then we don’t know how to speak in rudimentary language, and can’t help feeling we have to speak fluently even in English.
Can you imagine this? If you haven’t had any neighbors who are not native, or haven’t heard rudimentary English. You may have some acquaintances that are not native speakers. Their English might be kind of strange and sometimes sounds rude, and you are used to their way of saying. You don’ think they are strange or rude, do you? However, Japanese people can’t help to be apprehensive that we may say something rude and you may get angry.
Here is what happened. One of my aunts went to abroad for her first time, when she met a woman in the country. My aunt doesn’t speak any foreign languages at all, and the woman spoke rudimentary Japanese. The woman said my aunt looked a lot like her mother, and called my aunt “Mama-san”. “Mama” is from the English word, and “san” is kind of Mr. and Mrs. The woman obviously said it with affection, but my aunt got very angry with it. Japanese people say “Mama-san” when calling a barkeeper and my aunt is biased against that kind of women.
The problem is that we are not used to talk with people from foreign countries.

The second reason:
Would you say “What?”, if I say your face is very fierce when you say “What?”?
Frankly speaking, your face is sometimes frightening to me.
I often hear that Japanese people are expressionless, while your face is too expressive, I think. Your smile is great, but some other expressions are a little bit terrifying sometimes. The problem is that we are not used to talk with people from foreign countries, here too.

The third reason:
Since Japanese is too different from English, learning English is very difficult for Japanese. Schools tell students that “yes” = “hai”, and “no” = “iie”, but in particular situation, these words exchange the meanings each other. This means that English words “yes” and “no” may be very complicated to understand for Japanese people. There are many other words with such problems. In addition, English has many sounds that Japanese people can’t catch. The coup de grace is that you speak too fast to follow! When speaking in English, I feel I’m idiot and you are becoming angry.
Among Japanese people, it is the listener’s responsibility to understand what the speaker means; while in English, it is the speaker’s responsibility to make what you says understood. When Japanese people speak English trying to overcome a lot of great difficulties, you don’t seem to even try to understand what we mean at all. Even in English conversation schools in Japan, I have heard this problem from friends many times. They commented that teachers who were native English speakers didn’t try to understand what they meant at all. They were not be able to raise difficulties to the teacher because they didn’t know what to say in English.
I know that my problem is that I’m not used to talk with people from foreign countries, but I’m still, to be honest, very nervous.

Thank you!


Hello, I may not understand English very well and I may lack words but I will try to understand you.

If you have questions about my post or Japanese customs, don't hesitate to ask.

I YamaP
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