mecurtin: Shen Wei & Zhao Yun Lan, close-up and close up (WeiLan closeup)
mecurtin ([personal profile] mecurtin) wrote in [community profile] sid_guardian2019-02-19 08:48 pm

Language confusion

[to the tune of "Land of Confusion"]

I'm only up to Episode 9 so far, but I already have SO MANY QUESTIONS. And feelings!!

As you probably recall, in Episode 6 Zhao Yun Lan says, in the English subtitles:

I don't know!

Just like that


(How does one extract the Chinese subtitle characters for running through Google translate etc? Is there a trick to it?)

Anyway, I was quite startled because what he says while the screen is saying "Just like that" sounds to my ear like je ne sais pas, French for "I don't know". (I am, or used to be, fluent in French.)

Is this a trick of my ears/brain? Is he actually speaking French, as an American might who jokes, "Affected? Moi?" Is there a more idiomatic English translation that "Just like that"?

So many questions! I'm actually really tempted to look for a way to learn ONLY spoken Chinese: I'm over 60, and I don't have the time or neurons to learn Chinese writing.

I've never listened to so much Chinese in a row before, and I'm struck by how different it sounds in Guardian than what I overhear (not infrequently) in central NJ. In particular, the actors' accents seem much less tonal and less nasal than what I hear around me.

In a bit of dialogue from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Michelle Yeoh sounds to my ear as though she's speaking the same dialect (or maybe topolect) as they do in Guardian, while Zhang Ziyi has a little bit of the tonal, nasal quality familiar to my ear. In some "Chinese on the Street" interviews, done in Beijing, there seem to me to be a range of speech styles, mostly much more tonal & nasal than in Guardian.

Is there a distinct "acting dialect" in Chinese, like the old Mid-Atlantic accent in English? Or is my ear just not attuned to what's actually going on?
china_shop: Guo Changcheng writing in his notebook (Guardian - rookie taking notes)

[personal profile] china_shop 2019-02-20 07:12 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm actually really tempted to look for a way to learn ONLY spoken Chinese: I'm over 60, and I don't have the time or neurons to learn Chinese writing.

I haven't succumbed to trying to learn Mandarin yet, but I know what you mean about the characters. An alternative might be to learn Pinyin, which uses the Roman alphabet. You'd still have to learn it, because the pronunciation is quite different from English, I believe (plus tones!), but at least it's phonetic?

I'm only up to Episode 9 so far, but I already have SO MANY QUESTIONS. And feelings!!

\o/!!! :-D