Thread: Help Please!!!
View Single Post
(#14 (permalink))
Old
OHayou's Avatar
OHayou (Offline)
JF Old Timer
 
Posts: 128
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Ohio
10-29-2011, 07:25 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by KyleGoetz View Post
Yes, which perfectly explains why I criticize Americans wearing Japanese message T shirts (and tattoos) without knowing the message for sure, but I don't criticize Japanese for the same thing. Our mentality in America is to have a cool message. I have always thought Japanese used foreign languages more for aesthetics than for the message itself. Hence Engrish.

I mean, it's not for want of access to skilled English speakers that the richest pop stars in the country have erroneous English in their songs!

You summed up very accurately the phenomenon.
A strange statement which seems almost inverted if you think about it.

A Japanese person wearing an incorrect English shirt, tattoo, etc would be far more likely to happen upon someone who would recognize the error as would an American with an incorrect Japanese shirt, tattoo, etc.

I bought a tea cup in Kyoto last year that is really neat and has Kanji all over it. I have no idea what it means and to be honest I'm afraid to post it because it might say something stupid and ruin the whole "mystique" of it. lol

Quote:
Originally Posted by TBox View Post
I have this horrible temptation to print up a t-shirt, "意味が分からん!かっこいいんだろう!" in as flashy a font as I can manage now. I bet it would sell. Especially if it had some random guy doing something outrageous on it.
lol. I purchased a bunch of shirts in Japan that had "half-right" English. They're a blast.

One is a Beach Shirt with a Sun and Waves and says:
"We keep riding the crest of wave even if there is a very painful thing."

One is a very cool (and great feeling) "racer" type shirt with a dragon/cool logos on the back and on the front:
"Two-wheeled motor vehicle powered by an engine."

They're cool looking shirts with a funny saying on it.

Last edited by OHayou : 10-29-2011 at 07:33 PM.
Reply With Quote