Kansai Japanese. Peter Tse
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If you really want to get to know Western Japan’s people, you’ll have to supplement your study of standard Japanese with Western Japanese. And with this book, you’ll have all you need to understand what you’re hearing in Western Japan and to communicate with friends, lovers, and foes in the language they really use.
KINKI AREA
1
AN INTRODUCTION TO KANSAI JAPANESE
The purpose of this book is to give you an in-depth and fun account of conversational Western Japanese. Hundreds of expressions are given first in Western Japanese, followed by Eastern Japanese and then English. Although this book is written primarily as a guide to Western Japanese, it can also be used to learn informal Japanese as spoken in Tōkyō, since all expressions are given in both Eastern and Western Japanese.
A WORD ABOUT REGIONAL NAMES
In this book, the term Western Japan describes the area of Honshū that is west of Nagoya. The Kinki district is an official geographical division that covers the prefectures of Shiga, Mie, Nara, Kyōto, Wakayama, Ōsaka, and Hyōgo. Kansai (literally, “west of the border”) is more of a cultural and historical term loosely used to describe the core area around Kōbe, Ōsaka, and Kyōto. Chūgoku refers to the most western part of Honshū, where the cities Okayama, Hiroshima, and Shimonoseki are found.
The heart of Eastern Japan is Tōkyō. The term Kantō (“east of the border”) is used to describe the greater Tōkyō region the way Kansai is used to describe the greater Ōsaka region.
WESTERN JAPANESE: A SHORT BACKGROUND
Western Japan has the longest history of all of Japan’s regions. Kinki and eastern Kyūshū are believed to be the areas of the country earliest settled by the Yamato people, ancestors of the present-day Japanese. The name Chūgoku, meaning “central country,” shows that this region was once the center of ancient Japan. Kinki, moreover, was the capital region for over a thousand years, first with Nara from 600 to 794, and then with Kyōto from 794 to 1868.
Eastern Japanese became the national standard for modern Japan primarily because Tōkyō, then called Edo, was made the nation’s capital in 1868. In fact, it seems that standard Japanese, or hyōjungo, was to some extent concocted from uptown Tokyo and other dialects during the Meiji era to deal with the huge numbers of immigrants swarming into Tōkyō from all over Japan speaking mutually unintelligible dialects.
If by historical chance Western Japanese failed to become the modern standard for all of Japan, it still must be regarded as the standard language of western Honshū. Although hyōjungo has affected spoken Western Japanese in recent years thanks to mass communications and standardized schooling, Western Japanese will never be replaced by hyōjungo in Western Japan. Western Japanese has become the informal language of Western Japan, with hyōjungo reserved for formal occasions, news broadcasts, and the like.
There are many similar but distinct dialects within Western Japan itself. There’s the crass sounding Banshū-ben spoken around Himeji on toward Okayama. There’s the tough sounding Ōsaka-ben, and there’s perhaps the most elegant sounding dialect in all Japan, refined Kyōto-ben. And this is just to name a few. Each dialect has its own special turns of phrase as well as unique slang and vocabulary. However, all western Honshū dialects are sufficiently alike to justify talking about a monolithic Western Japanese dialect. In this book emphasis is placed on the “standard” Western Japanese spoken by people in the central Kinki region. However, some attention is also paid to other versions of the dialect. There are short sections that focus on Hiroshima Japanese, polite Kyōto usage, and Naniwa kotoba, a certain style of Ōsaka Japanese spoken primarily by older people nowadays, but often heard on TV and radio in Ōsaka. These chapters should help listening skills considerably.
ABOUT THE FORMAT
Throughout this book, Western Japanese is contrasted with Eastern Japanese, which is the language of Tōkyō and surrounding areas. Eastern Japanese is not the same as hyōjungo, or standard Japanese, which is an ideal version of the language not flawlessly spoken by anyone except maybe newscasters and other professional talkers. Throughout this book, words and phrases given in Western Japanese are followed by the Eastern Japanese equivalent in meaning and tone. For instance, Ōsaka slang expressions are given in Tokyo slang, not perfect hyōjungo, in order to preserve the right tone. An attempt is made to capture approximately the same tone in the English translations as well.
Each word or phrase is given first in Western Japanese (w), then in Eastern Japanese (e), and then in English. For example:
w: A: Watashi Hawai ni iku tsumori ya.
B: Honma ni?
e: A: Watashi (wa) Hawai ni iku tsumori desu.
B: Honto ni?
A: I plan to go to Hawaii.
B: Really?
Most words and phrases in this book will be understood throughout Western japan. However, in some cases a word will be followed by the region’s name, “(Hiroshima)” or “(Ōsaka)” for example, indicating that the word or phrase used is particular to that region.
PRONUNCIATION
The intonation of Western Japanese is said to be opposite that of Eastern Japanese. Whereas it’s “aME” in Western Japanese, it’s “Ame” in Eastern Japanese. Both mean rain. But if you use Tokyo intonation and say “Ame” in Ōsaka it will mean candy, not rain. Similarly, there are characteristic pitch patterns within a sentence that set Western Japanese apart from most types of Eastern Japanese. For example, whereas it’s “WATASHI WA AMERIKA-jin deSU” in Ōsaka, it’s “Watashi WA aMErika-jin DEsu” in Tōkyō. In addition, there is a relative lack of crisp double consonants, such as tt or kk, in Western Japanese.
Although as immediately apparent to Japanese ears as an English accent is to American ears, the difference in intonation between Western and Eastern Japanese is generally too subtle for English speakers to hear or imitate without having lived in Japan for a period of time. Unless you are a linguistic genius or under the age of six, you will probably end up speaking Japanese with a foreign accent anyway, so this book leaves the differences in Western Japanese intonation aside and concentrates on the differences in wording. If there is any pitch pattern you should imitate, it is that of newscasters, since their intonation has the greatest legitimacy.
MEN’S AND WOMEN’S KANSAI TALK
Men and women tend to speak more alike in Western Japan than they do in Kantō. For example, the particle na will generally be replaced by ne in women’s speech in Eastern Japan. However, in Western Japan it is not at all uncommon to hear women say na, especially when talking informally. Similarly, the particle wa used for feminine emphasis in Eastern