Arigato or Thank you
It seems that most people think that Japanese should be used to name techniques. What do you think about using Japanese for things other than techniques? Should we say thank you to our partner in our native language or in Japanese? How about other common situations in the dojo?
Charles |
Just got back from a four-day seminar in Germany. Many different ways were used to say 'thank you' - english, sweedish, danish, german and japanese. I prefer the line 'domo arigato gosaimashite' (sp. ?) simply because just about everybody knows what I mean, and the sensei was japanese. I'll go for tradition on this subject any day.
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I usually use english. I know a bit of Japanese but it always feels so pretentious, especially when nobody there is Japanese.
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Do you bow into the dojo and onto the mat and to your partner? ... Why? I use the Jpn, but I don't feel pretentious, but quaint. I'd much prefer training in fatigues (no more nose-dives courtesy of the HAKAMA), but with Jpn teachers still largely constituting the "charisma" of the art (to use Peter Goldsbury's term), I'd quickly be disenfranchised from participation in group activities. Jpn thank you just fits. (I wish intoning it'd improve my KOTE GAESHI/forearm return, though...) |
Seeing as how I train in Yokosuka and Kurihama, 65 km south of Tokyo, Japanese it is... in ALL conversation.
:) -drin |
Arigato or thank you
In our training, some say thank you and some say arigato XXXXXXX. I think arigato xxxxx is prefer than thank you though it means the same. We are practising Jpn martial art.
Cheers, mengsin |
Re: Arigato or thank you
Quote:
Don--did I get that spelling right?--Modesto |
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