Essential Japanese Vocabulary. Akira Miura

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Essential Japanese Vocabulary - Akira Miura

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sagashita keredo mitsukaranakatta.

       あちこち捜したけれど見つからなかった。

       I looked far and wide but couldn’t find it.

      There is another variant, atchikotchi あっちこち, which is a little more colloquial than achikochi あちこち.

      Agaru 上がる to go up

      The basic meaning of agaru 上がる is “to go up.”

      EXAMPLE:

      (1) Mata gasorin no nedan ga agatta.

       またガソリンの値段が上がった。

       The price of gasoline has gone up again.

      Entering a Japanese-style house as a guest is also agaru 上がる because it is an act of “going up.” When you enter a Japanese home, you first step into the genkan 玄関, or vestibule. There you take off your shoes and take a step up to the floor level of the house. The act of stepping into the vestibule is hairu 入る “to go in,” but the act of stepping up to the floor level of the house is agaru 上がる “to take a step up.” That is why the Japanese host says to a visitor:

      EXAMPLE:

      (2) Dōzo oagari kudasai.

       どうぞ お上がりください。

       Please come in (lit., step up).

      Sentence (3) below therefore sounds extremely strange.

      EXAMPLE:

      (3) *Nihonjin wa ie ni hairu mae ni kutsu o nugimasu.

       *日本人は家に入る前に靴を脱ぎます。

       The Japanese take off their shoes before going into the house.

      Agaru 上がる has to be used in this context. Otherwise sentence (3) would describe someone taking off his shoes outside the front door!

      A

isu
ru 愛する to love

      The noun ai 愛 “love” and its verbal counterpart, aiuru 愛する “to love,” are both written expressions. Although some young lovers nowadays may use such words of endearment as Aishite-iru yo 愛しているよ (men’s speech) and Aishite-iru wa 愛しているわ (women’s speech) to mean “I love you,” such sentences still sound stilted because the verb 愛する aisuru is rarely used in speech. Kimi ga suki da 君が好きだ (men’s speech) and Anata ga suki yo あなたが好きよ (women’s speech) also mean “I love you.” The versions containing suki 好き (see SUKI) are more conversational and are perhaps more frequently used in speech than the versions with aisuru. As Donald Keene (p. 156) wisely points out, however, the most typically Japanese expression of love has been silence (although, in the rapidly changing society of contemporary Japan, this tradition too may be on its way out).

      A

ite
相手 partner, opponent

      Aite 相手 means someone with whom one does something. Depending on the activity, therefore, aite could be either one’s partner or competitor.

      EXAMPLES:

      (1) kekkon no aite

       結婚の相手

       marriage partner

      (2) ashita no shiai no aite

       あしたの試合の相手

       the opponent of tomorrow’s game/match

      A

kachan 赤ちゃん baby

      Akachan 赤ちゃん is normally a word for someone else’s baby.

      EXAMPLE:

      (1) Otaku no akachan wa hontō ni ogenki sō desu nē.

       お宅の赤ちゃんは本当にお元気そうですねえ。

       Your baby really looks healthy, doesn’t he/she!

      Although some Japanese, especially women, use the word to refer to their own babies, the practice, in my opinion, is in poor taste. The word to be used in that case is akanbō 赤ん坊.

      EXAMPLE:

      (2) Kyō wa uchi no akanbō no tanjōbi na n desu.

      きょうはうちの赤ん坊の誕生日なんです。

       Today is my baby’s birthday.

      A

kema
medetō gozaima
su 明けましておめでとうございます Happy New Year!

      When a New Year draws near, English speakers still new in Japan often ask their Japanese friends how to say “Happy New Year!” in Japanese. The answer is almost always Akemashite omedetō gozaimasu 明けましておめでとうございます (or its equivalent Shin-nen omedetō gozaimasu 新年おめでとうございます). Having received this answer, these English speakers practice hard to memorize this long salutation and, after finally learning it, they try it on their Japanese associates—most likely toward the end of December. Unfortunately, this Japanese greeting may not be used until New Year’s Day since it literally means “[The New Year] having begun, this is indeed a happy occasion.” This contrasts with the English salutation “Happy New Year!,” which is an abbreviation of “I wish you a happy New Year” and may therefore be used before the arrival of the New Year. The expression to be used before the old year expires is Yoi otoshi o omukae kudasai よいお年 をお迎えください “May you see in a good year!” However, this is a rather formal salutation and is rarely used among close friends. There is regrettably no informal equivalent, except for the shorter form Yoi otoshi o 良いお年を, which is sometimes used.

      In America, New Year’s wishes are exchanged with vigor at the stroke of midnight among those present at New Year’s Eve parties. After that, however, “Happy New Year!” is, as it were, put away in mothballs fairly quickly in my experience. In Japan, Akemashite omedetō gozaimasu is heard at least through the first week of January and sometimes as late as the middle of the month.

      Amai 甘い sweet

      Amai

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