Things I learned (am learning) today
1. Most vending machines have changed appropriately with the season. While this originally resulted in me accidentally getting a hot tea when I wanted a cold tea a few times, I came to a funny conclusion today: If I have a cold and I want hot cocoa or hot tea or something, it takes a lot less effort to put 120 yen into a vending machine down the street and get a nice hot beverage can, than it takes to actually prepare tea or cocoa or whatever. Man, I'm so lazy, but at the same time, I fully support my vending machine overlords.
2. Tonden gives me these 10% off coupons every time I go there, and I always forget I have them. Tonight I brought my coupon there only to realize that the coupon is only good if you spend 2000 yen or more. Being by myself, that never happens. I even told that to the lady at the counter and she was like "That's too bad, I'm so sorry," and then handed me ANOTHER 10% of 2000+ coupon. Sigh.
3. I can finally sort of kind of get the end-of-day answering machine message said in 30 seconds but I still stumble over the words. This is only important because on Thursday Eri won't be at GEOS and I'll be the only one there so it's my problem to change our message on the machine -- in Japanese -- in 30 seconds. The first time I tried to read this thing it took a minute so I'm vastly improving:
お電話ありがとうございます。英会話ジオス赤羽校でございます。せっかくお電話をいただきましたが当校の受付時間は月曜日から土曜日のお昼の12時から夜9時までとなっております。体験レッスンのお申し込みパンフレットのご要望はフリーダイヤル0120-011-109にて承っております。また生徒様のご連絡はこの留守番電話がお受けいたします。本日はお電話ありがとうございました。
She says my pronunciation is good but I need to stop stumbling over the keigo. (I'd simply never learned ones like that "uketamawatteorimasu" construction before.)
4. Coffee is apparently a really good example for MANY grammatical forms. I think I used some form of "drinking coffee" in every class today, be it from "what is your opinion on coffee" to "drinking too much coffee will cause you to sleep less" to "I guess coffee tastes good" to "Having drunk too much coffee yesterday, I couldn't get to sleep."
And as it is, it seems like EVERYONE in Japan drinks coffee.
2. Tonden gives me these 10% off coupons every time I go there, and I always forget I have them. Tonight I brought my coupon there only to realize that the coupon is only good if you spend 2000 yen or more. Being by myself, that never happens. I even told that to the lady at the counter and she was like "That's too bad, I'm so sorry," and then handed me ANOTHER 10% of 2000+ coupon. Sigh.
3. I can finally sort of kind of get the end-of-day answering machine message said in 30 seconds but I still stumble over the words. This is only important because on Thursday Eri won't be at GEOS and I'll be the only one there so it's my problem to change our message on the machine -- in Japanese -- in 30 seconds. The first time I tried to read this thing it took a minute so I'm vastly improving:
お電話ありがとうございます。英会話ジオス赤羽校でございます。せっかくお電話をいただきましたが当校の受付時間は月曜日から土曜日のお昼の12時から夜9時までとなっております。体験レッスンのお申し込みパンフレットのご要望はフリーダイヤル0120-011-109にて承っております。また生徒様のご連絡はこの留守番電話がお受けいたします。本日はお電話ありがとうございました。
She says my pronunciation is good but I need to stop stumbling over the keigo. (I'd simply never learned ones like that "uketamawatteorimasu" construction before.)
4. Coffee is apparently a really good example for MANY grammatical forms. I think I used some form of "drinking coffee" in every class today, be it from "what is your opinion on coffee" to "drinking too much coffee will cause you to sleep less" to "I guess coffee tastes good" to "Having drunk too much coffee yesterday, I couldn't get to sleep."
And as it is, it seems like EVERYONE in Japan drinks coffee.

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朝8時から午後4時まで授業があるからとても忙しいです。
Uketamawaru is a fun verb. Five kana to one kanji! And I'm kinda surprised you've not seen it on trains and things--that's where I picked it up, I think.
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But why do you have to change it every day? It doesn't say what day of the week it is or anything, so surely they could just record a really nice one and keep it forever?
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And yeah, I thought you'd get a kick out of this keigo thing. We should have you come to Japan and do our answering machines, you could do the "male uguisujyou" voice pretty well I bet :)
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I don't think it's wrong to want me not to speak Japanese around students, just because there's supposed to be this illusion of "I don't understand you" going on here if they speak to me in Japanese, so they HAVE to speak English. BUT around visitors and such, I think it's stupid. They're maybe partially worried about me being rude, but still, I'd think once I explained that "I don't speak Japanese very well, let me try to tell you this information anyway", it'd be okay. Whatever.
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I think we might actually have two answering machines.
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It takes me four or five tries to record an answering machine message in English--I'm not sure Japanese would be better. :)
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Also, I don't drink coffee, hehe. Well, when I'm at a school and they offer it to me, I don't refuse, but...
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...but then I remembered RikaiChan. :P
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