【9 minutes Japanese conversation】with

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 72

  • @yuyunihongopodcast
    @yuyunihongopodcast Год назад +23

    コラボありがとー!( *´艸`)
    楽しかったよ♪

    • @mikurealjapanese
      @mikurealjapanese  Год назад +4

      ありがとうございました!また次回も楽しみにしてます!😊✨

  • @davidcrary1807
    @davidcrary1807 Год назад +14

    I was so engrossed in the conversation, I didn't feel the minutes fly by. Thank you for the interesting conversation and cultural perspective. Keep it up the great work!

  • @nathanielvalbuena6100
    @nathanielvalbuena6100 Год назад +13

    I understood 80% without looking at the english subtitles! 本当ありがとうございましたミク先生

  • @SerChen
    @SerChen Год назад +17

    Great conversation. Not only do I can practise my listening, I can also learn the difference in culture between Japanese and my culture. It therefore explains how to interact with Japanese better 👍

  • @paulwalther5237
    @paulwalther5237 Год назад +11

    When I was in Japan I noticed Japanese people talking to foreigners almost always led to the Japanese person doing all the listening and it always seemed to be due to language ability. If they were speaking Japanese then they had to let the foreigner do all the talking because the foreigner might be able to speak simple Japanese but he or she could not understand native level Japanese. And if the conversation were in English then the Japanese person had to do all the listening because they couldn’t express themselves in English 😂.
    It always led to Japanese people doing all the listening.

    • @keiga4370
      @keiga4370 Год назад +2

      Some cultures put too much emphasis on "expressing" yourself, as if you will "lose" your Self if you don't express what you are about. Eastern wisdom: you know more about someone or some situation from listening and observing rather than from talking.

    • @Idorise
      @Idorise Год назад

      ​@@keiga4370 Talk when necesary, shut up when necesary, fight when you have to... Or let the other destroy your body like a Jedi! 😂

  • @didierlafond3365
    @didierlafond3365 8 месяцев назад +1

    You explain very well the differences between western and japanese communication style. I have been learning japanese for 3 years now and I regulary listen to your videos and podcasts that are so great, Some are difficult, like this one, but I learn a lot and get used to natural japanese conversation. Thank you so much for your lively podcasts! Every morning, I say to myself : let's see what Miku does today!!! greetings from Canada Didier

    • @mikurealjapanese
      @mikurealjapanese  8 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for such a kind comment 🥰🥰 I'm so happy I can serve you with what I create 😆

    • @didierlafond3365
      @didierlafond3365 8 месяцев назад

      I listen over and over again your podcasts that are so great and so deeply immerged in the japanese way of life. I have japanese friends in Germany, Japan and Canada (where I live now) I am very interested especially with your podcasts with Yuske san. Both of you are the joy of life!!! and you master so well how to teach japanese (I have been french teacher in Germany a long time ago and I know what the difficulties are to communicate culture and language. As far as I am concerned, I am found of the japanese language and culture; I am found of the musicality of the japanese language, the pitch accent, the intonations, all that speak to me!! This morning, I listen once more to this podcast....Marco,,,,, do you know, there is a little Italy in Montreal, where I live!!! My wife has been learning italian and every morning we go for a coffee in an italian coffeeshop where she can practice her italian. So Marco, let me know if you intend, one day, to visit Montreal in Canada! greetings from Montreal DIdier@@mikurealjapanese

  • @alexandrasch139
    @alexandrasch139 Год назад +6

    I like those conversations with transcripts and explanations of some difficult words. I am planning to subscribe to your patreon to practice more my conversation listening. You two are the best. Love Yuyu very much too!

  • @mglapyae7035
    @mglapyae7035 Год назад +2

    全部分かりました。いつもゆゆゆ先生のPodcastを聞いているんなので、分かりやすいですよね、ありがとうございます。この動画のようなもっと見たいなあ〜お願いいたします

  • @TheGreaterU
    @TheGreaterU 4 дня назад

    Very interesting! Thank you.

  • @NEAsama
    @NEAsama Год назад +1

    2回 聞いたおかげで 60 % わかって こられます。。

  • @yuyanway3149
    @yuyanway3149 Год назад +1

    Miku 先生のビデオ 本当にありがとうございます

  • @whatyouexpect2650
    @whatyouexpect2650 Год назад +2

    どう考えても日本語でも英語でも自分のことを話すのが得意じゃないので、質問をするのはいいアドバイスだと思います。
    そんな感じで話そうとしたら、会話がはずむかもしれませんよね!

  • @user-zd2fo6bl8d
    @user-zd2fo6bl8d 11 месяцев назад +1

    #ありがとうございます!
    楽しいかったよ🤗

  • @avalynn0022
    @avalynn0022 Год назад +1

    thank you for adding subtitles below for translation! very helpul

  • @jssmedialangs
    @jssmedialangs Год назад +4

    I noticed he uses あと instead of そして or それに... 🤔 So I'm learning a more natural way to frame things. 😊 動画を作ってくれてありがとうございます!

    • @paulwalther5237
      @paulwalther5237 Год назад

      Everyone has their own style of speaking and especially guys vs gals. Its nice to have a male teacher. Most teachers are women.

  • @ASkids_chanel
    @ASkids_chanel Год назад

    会話が分かりやすいんです。でも やっぱり私はたくさん言葉を覚えないといけないです。ミクさんの日本語の会話が私にとっても役に立つです。❤❤

  • @Pochita12345
    @Pochita12345 Год назад +3

    I could kinda understand the context, but some sentences are still hard, I'll keep giving my best and study more though. Thank you so much Miku Sensei!!

  • @WakaoSax
    @WakaoSax Год назад +1

    少しだけ分かりましたけど、聞くのが楽しかったです。もっと勉強します。ありがとうございます!

  • @trianasinaga7687
    @trianasinaga7687 Год назад

    ありがとうございます🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @belindadevera8436
    @belindadevera8436 Год назад +1

    いいな。。。聞きやすい。。❤

  • @sasugaNihongo
    @sasugaNihongo Год назад

    ミク先生にいつも感謝しています。

  • @donjulioPJ
    @donjulioPJ Год назад

    I found this really insightful, because I feel like I would've ended in the same situation as that friend

  • @Kendy0502
    @Kendy0502 Год назад +3

    Number 1 fan

  • @ajsolta7051
    @ajsolta7051 Год назад +2

    I don't understand totally but i enjoy watching your video .. lots of love💕
    Keep going 😊

  • @polunochniy862
    @polunochniy862 Год назад +4

    それはやっぱりそうだが、「常識的な質問したり答えたりしたいことができなかったら、一体会話の意味は何なのか」と外国人の私は思います。こう行動して檻の中に閉じ込められるような感じがしますね。こんな場合にぴったり合う「甘い嘘より苦い真実の方がいい」という諺があります。自由に自分の思うことが話せなかったら、相手は友達かどうか分からないものです。いつか共有の接する点や趣味が最初からなかったり、相手を傷つかないようにお互いに嘘をしたりしただけだと判明するだからです。本当のところ今聞いた情報を少し考え込んだら、海外の人からすると日本人は自分と相手の違うところを受け入れることや上下関係を崩すのが死ぬほど恐がるように感じますね。だから日本人は曖昧を使って会話をします。だから話をしやすくする手段を必死に探そうとします。日本人はストレートな話し方をする海外の人のことを憧れると同時に大嫌いと無礼と思われるらしいです。私も今そういう風に話すので、やっぱり多くの日本人に嫌われたり以外に思ったりするでしょう。だが、それは私的な意見だけです。本当にすみません。ただ気にしないでくださいね。ビデオをありがとう。

    • @Idorise
      @Idorise Год назад +1

      Il y a des peuples qui n'aiment pas dire non.
      Par exemple au Maroc on te répondra toujours Oui oui si tu demandes quelque chose... Même si après, plus rien.

    • @polunochniy862
      @polunochniy862 Год назад +1

      @@Idorise
      Je ne discute pas. Je n'aime pas vraiment parler moi-même. Mais si un dialogue est nécessaire ou si l'on veut le mener, alors il doit être significatif, non superficiel et non feint. N'est-ce pas la vraie valeur de la communication ? Personnellement, je ne veux pas qu'une personne me parle comme un robot ou comme un étranger avec les phrases les plus simples d'un manuel, craignant à chaque seconde que quelque chose se passe mal. Après tout, nous parlons aux gens, pas aux répondeurs. Il est clair que dans différents pays tout cela est basé sur des cultures de communication complètement différentes, mais cela ne justifie toujours pas leurs inconvénients. Je ne peux certainement pas et n'ai pas le droit de condamner, mais je le regarde juste comme une personne du point opposé du globe. Et c'est bizarre. Cela nous aliène l'un de l'autre sous couvert de proximité et de bienveillance, sous couvert de respect de l'autre et de son espace, limitant en même temps sa liberté d'exprimer ses pensées et ses sentiments, la liberté de retirer sa tension émotionnelle de l'oppressant cadre de la culture de la communication. L'insatisfaction à l'égard du tabou, bien que non consciente, s'accumule à l'intérieur et tôt ou tard une personne s'effondre mentalement si elle n'est pas capable de résister au stress
      P.S. Je suis désolé si ma réponse semble bizarre. Je n'écris pas du tout en français et j'ai dû utiliser un traducteur automatique

    • @Idorise
      @Idorise Год назад

      @@polunochniy862 Viens vivre en France y a plein de gens comme toi!! 🤣 Il reste que les Français ont aussi leurs tabous.

    • @polunochniy862
      @polunochniy862 Год назад

      @@Idorise
      Héhé. Eh bien, peut-être. Peut-être qu'un jour je le ferai. Merci pour l'accueil XD

  • @serflord
    @serflord Год назад +1

    みくさんがいつも、ただ英字幕だけじゃなくて、動画の中にも文法・単語の説明もくれてありがとうございます!大変に助かりマスタ。
    そうですね、英語圏の人は大体、会話のスキルについて考えません。これを見た後、僕も自分の会話についてもっと考えていきますね!ww

    • @paulwalther5237
      @paulwalther5237 Год назад

      It seems like your Japanese is good enough you don’t need subtitles 😂

    • @serflord
      @serflord Год назад +1

      @@paulwalther5237 Thanks, I wish...but I did still need subtitles for most of this conversation.

  • @mirageauthor393
    @mirageauthor393 Год назад

    どうもありがとうございます🙌🏻👏🏻

  • @jespernorvin6093
    @jespernorvin6093 Год назад +4

    この会話は聞き上手の練習になりました

  • @Kyaro8888Cari
    @Kyaro8888Cari 10 месяцев назад

    I wonder if Japan is a country where an INFJ would feel at home. Does anyone know about the Myers Briggs personality types? INFJ is one of them (introverted, intuitive, feeling, judging), and INFJs often are concerned with what other people are thinking and feeling during conversations.

  • @Pickpikeyhamronepal2024
    @Pickpikeyhamronepal2024 Год назад

    Good conversation

  • @JTSoftware
    @JTSoftware Год назад

    This would be so much easier to study if there were Japanese and English subtitle files attached so that we could use the Language Reactor plug-in to study it. (I bought your whole shadowing collection.)

  • @katblancaflor3361
    @katblancaflor3361 Год назад

    Hi Miku sensei, I always learn in ur vids and podcast., may I ask how to give u reviews in spotify? :)

  • @Aeris_InJapan
    @Aeris_InJapan Год назад

    french conversation is simple : I m more intelligent than you, and I'll prove you, or you'll have to prove me you're better than me with a better talk.
    there is worst, we have conversation with friends or we almost speak at each others in the same time, but we use parallel processing, that's funny ( not happen all the time, but that can turn that wild easily ) ( it doesn't mean we don't listen the other, it means, LET ME BE RIGHT ( we get excited by the prospect of finding the point ), BUT IF YOU RIGHT ALRIGHT JUST SHOW ME YOU ARE DETERMINED TO SPEAK MORE AND MORE OVER ME )
    I mean can be the vibe, of course we don't do this all the time, but that's the vibe.
    the dynamic is not ping pong at all LOL, it's more like punch fight

  • @songthanh896
    @songthanh896 Год назад

    お疲れ様です😊すごい話です!

  • @user-sy2ct4sd7v
    @user-sy2ct4sd7v 10 месяцев назад

  • @normiel7135
    @normiel7135 Год назад

    それみたいに考えことがないけど自分の意見を話しすぎちゃって気づくと「あ、どうすればいいんだろう」ってよく考えてます。それに国によるけど会話違うですよね!だから私も日本人と話す時は相手に質問しない場合は、話しにくいと思います

  • @zapatafa
    @zapatafa Год назад +4

    I'm curious: why does Yusuke speak informally and Miku formally? What context am I missing?

    • @mikurealjapanese
      @mikurealjapanese  Год назад +10

      Yusuke san used to be my Senpai when I was working for a Japanese school in Mexico. And he's older than me. So I would use formal speech naturally.

    • @The_SUN1234
      @The_SUN1234 Год назад

      @@mikurealjapanese what does senpai means?

    • @mikurealjapanese
      @mikurealjapanese  Год назад +4

      @@The_SUN1234 Senpai (先輩、せんぱい, "former born") is used to address or refer to one's older or more senior colleagues in a school, workplace, or sports club. Teachers are not senpai, but rather they are sensei. Neither are students of the same or lower grade: they are referred to but never addressed as kōhai (後輩、こうはい).

    • @paulwalther5237
      @paulwalther5237 Год назад

      @@mikurealjapanese So he makes you speak keigo to him?! Like in anime? 😂

    • @Billy-vr9iu
      @Billy-vr9iu Год назад +5

      @@paulwalther5237 It's not like "he makes". This is japanese culture and it is a show of respect

  • @genehennigh3305
    @genehennigh3305 Год назад

    Your videos are interesting and sooooo enjoyable. Whatever you do, don't stop with your videos. Oh, do other things, too, but at least keep making videos, even if you have to do fewer. You're the best.

    • @abeltarihoran9755
      @abeltarihoran9755 Год назад

      Videonya sangat menarik kak.keren💟💟💟👍👍

  • @user-qp6jt7mk8r
    @user-qp6jt7mk8r Год назад

    I always end up as a listener because I don’t like talking about myself, especially with acquaintances. I don’t think it’s black & white like foreigners think this way, Japanese ppl think this way.
    It depends on the person. I’m very quiet & I’d rather listen. I always try to accommodate to the other person

  • @bihanghising1500
    @bihanghising1500 Год назад

    すこしわかりした

  • @geruto17760
    @geruto17760 Год назад +1

    素晴らしいトピック。Well, you have to establish some common ground before venturing on to more controversial subjects. Therefore it is not advised to talk about religion or politics on the first date. To start with, the content is not so important, ie. if you like or dislike cats is beside the point at this stage. If it is too close to your heart, start talking about the weather. 😊 If you are meeting for dinner, you could exchange views on certain foods, because at the end of the day, it doesn't matter if someone prefers Udon or Ramen, does it. 😅

  • @gabrieluceda1163
    @gabrieluceda1163 Год назад

    アメリカの会話文化では、私たちは論争するのが好きです

  • @The_SUN1234
    @The_SUN1234 Год назад

    yellow letters are barely visible or not at all.

  • @Aeris_InJapan
    @Aeris_InJapan Год назад

    distinctions between French-speaking and Japanese-speaking communication styles within the Lewis Model:
    French communication tends to be more direct and explicit, focusing on facts and logic.
    There is an emphasis on lively discussions and debates, with individuals expressing their opinions openly.
    Interruptions and overlapping speech can be more common, as people may eagerly contribute to the conversation.
    Body language, gestures, and facial expressions are used to emphasize points and convey emotions.
    Reactive Cultures (e.g., Japanese-speaking):
    Japanese communication often values indirectness and implicit communication, relying on context and nonverbal cues.
    Silence and pauses are considered important, allowing time for reflection and understanding.
    Harmony and consensus are highly valued, and there may be a preference for avoiding confrontation or disagreement.
    Nonverbal communication, such as facial expressions and body language, is essential for conveying meaning and gauging reactions.

  • @stavolan
    @stavolan Год назад

    ホンジュラスからのご挨拶。あなたのビデオをありがとう

    • @mikurealjapanese
      @mikurealjapanese  Год назад +1

      ホンジュラスから見てくれて、ありがとう!♥️Gracias!!!!!!

  • @mudkip_btw
    @mudkip_btw Год назад

    毎動画とは英語の字幕は大事すくなくなります。それにゆうすけさんとみくさんめちゃ感謝してもらいたい。may the algorithm be ever in your favour :D

  • @arughat-1gorkha457
    @arughat-1gorkha457 Год назад

    私が日本人友達作りたいです。

  • @jytan740
    @jytan740 Год назад

    u think what topic is easy to talk, the other person also think so, in the end both end up in awkward conversation.

  • @Idorise
    @Idorise Год назад

    En tant que Français, lorsqu'on regarde un film Japonais, je pense que la plupart de mes compatriotes se disent que les acteurs jouent des personnes autistes!! 😂
    Ils parlent beaucoup moins que nous, et quand ils parlent on a l'impression qu'ils sont un peu bêtes !! ゴメン