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Elizabeth Scally's avatar

I work with English language learners in a high school in Japan. Many will tell you they can't speak English, but when asked to exchange information or converse freely in English, most are capable of expressing themselves adequately.

I accompanied an American coworker on a field trip. She told me she'd studied Japanese in university and passed the Japanese Language Proficiency Test, and pretty confident in her ability to be my interpreter for the day. She certainly was fluent, but got puzzled looks from Japanese people we encountered. At the time, my listening comprehension was sufficient to notice that she sounded stuffy with overuse of sonkeigo and kenjougo.

It's easy to mistake fluency for high ability in Japanese, I'd say. I'm still working on learning to say the right thing for the situation!

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GGR's avatar

Fascinating research that underscores what we know: British friend moved to the US for graduate school and was asked about his Japanese ability by his American supervisor. To his properly modest “Oh, I can get by,” his supervisor responded “That’s a problem! I expected you to be much better than that!” 😂

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