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#3 |
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If I were Japanese I would think he was mocking me.
And you would be right to think so. Calling George Bush "Joruju Bushu" is the equivalent of approaching a Japanese man who's waiting to shake your hand and then suddenly bowing down ninety degrees like a jackass because you want to "show respect for Japanese culture". Japanese people know who George Bush is and know how to shake hands, for god's sake. |
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#5 |
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I also find it silly when English-speaking people pronounce foreign loan-words using the foreign pronunciation (instead of the English pronunciation) when speaking to somebody who is (presumably) from the foreign country from which the loan-word originates. Kah-rah-tee does not suddenly become kah-rah-tay just because you're speaking to a Japanese person (or a Chinese or Korean person because what's the difference am I right?).
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#10 |
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I wasn't sure that "rolled r" was the description I was looking for, but the only other description I could think of was "that 'r' thing that the Russians do." Anyway, another common name with different pronunciation is "Ivan," which in Russian of course would be "ee-VAHN" instead of "EYE-van." I went to college with a guy who was an American-born Russian Jew and bristled at the latter pronunciation, which just means he will constantly have to correct people here in the U.S for the rest of his life. |
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#12 |
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#14 |
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#15 |
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This brings me back to hours of voice lessons and having it drilled into me the difference between rolling and flipping Rs. Basically, the roll is where it's longer, "r-r-r" (like Eartha Kitt's schtick), and the flip is the a single instance, where the r is almost made to sound like a soft d instead. ![]() |
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#17 |
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#18 |
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#19 |
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"Ki" pronounced like "key," or "ki" pronounced like "kai"? Che-SAR KAH-AI-zar (dipthong, so the A and E are articulated separately) KAY-zar But regardless of that, there's no way a 1st century Jewish rabbi named Yeshua would recognize his name as "GEE-zus," or "Hay-SOOS," or "JEEZ-ee CREEZ-ee." ![]() |
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#20 |
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If I were Japanese I would think he was mocking me. Calling George Bush "Joruju Bushu" is the equivalent of approaching a Japanese man who's waiting to shake your hand and then suddenly bowing down ninety degrees like a jackass because you want to "show respect for Japanese culture". Japanese people know who George Bush is and know how to shake hands, for god's sake. Like Obama? ![]() |
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