Soulmate Gem
Photo: cottonbro studio
Linguistic differences aside, there is a larger cultural difference that causes a mistranslation to occur. Japanese people simply do not regularly say “I love you.” Someone might say “Aishiteru” in a sappy romantic movie, but overall the lingering impression after one professes their love in Japanese is a profound ...
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Read More »This is Mistranslate, a monthly column by Nina Li Coomes about language, self-expression, and what it means to exist between cultures. Last week, a half-Japanese friend of mine told me that on a visit to Japan, she asked her Japanese mother if she felt any angst over her daughter not being able to speak Japanese. “Oh, I don’t mind,” her mother replied in English. “This way I can tell you I love you.” To non-Japanese speakers, this might seem like a strange sentiment. For my friend and me, it was cause for immediate peals of laughter. Her mother was exactly right: In Japanese, there is no way to say “I love you.”
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Read More »In Japanese, the phrase “I love you” exists linguistically, but does not exist culturally. Linguistically, it is best translated as 愛してる or Aishiteru. Unlike English, it does not contain the “I” and “you” involved in “I love you”; instead, the “I” is implicit, belonging to the speaker only in assumption, as is the “you.” The phrase most directly means “(I) am loving (you),” as if to convey that love is an active labor, not just an amorphous feeling tossed between two parties. Linguistic differences aside, there is a larger cultural difference that causes a mistranslation to occur. Japanese people simply do not regularly say “I love you.” Someone might say “Aishiteru” in a sappy romantic movie, but overall the lingering impression after one professes their love in Japanese is a profound feeling of undeniable awkwardness. It’s not that there’s no way to convey love in the Japanese language—there are hundreds of ways to convey love, but many of them are nonverbal. When reminiscing about maternal love, Japanese people will sometimes reference おふくろの味 (Ofukuro no aji), or the specific taste of a mother’s cooking, as a form of love. Lovers are not bound by emotion, but rather by an invisible “red thread of fate” or 運命の赤い糸. On Valentine’s Day, Japanese women are tasked with giving boxes of chocolates to the objects of their affection. A month later, on a holiday known as White Day, if the feeling is mutual, said object of affection is expected to give a small gift in return. We celebrate 七夕 or Tanabata on July 7th, a holiday that honors the love between two celestial beings separated by the Milky Way. The heavenly lovers’ devotion to each other is not shown by speech, but rather by their love story: Separated for eternity, they are allowed to meet only once a year, on the seventh day of the seventh month. Their love is remembrance, thoughtfulness, the willingness to endure on behalf of another. Paradoxically, in the same way that the unused “Aishiteru” implies action, it seems in Japanese, we do not speak love but rather act it.
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Read More »It shouldn’t have surprised me, then, when my father scolded me for joking about Jack’s awkward “Aishiteru”s. He thought it was uncaring of me to continue to let Jack use the wrong term without his knowledge. “You have to tell him to stop that!” he said. “How will he ever learn the language if you won’t tell him he’s saying the wrong thing?”
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