6 Haziran 2012 Çarşamba

Interjection (叹词)

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Interjections (å�¹è¯�) are another type of "虚è¯�" or empty words. At least one interjection seems to be common to many if not all languages, i.e., Ah (å•Š). Some are only slightly different in pronunciation among different languages, e.g. Chinese "哦" pronounced [o:] (IPA symbol) compared to English "Oh". Some are pronounced about the same but carry different meanings, such as Chinese "欸" which suggests slight surprise and confusion ("欸,他怎么å�ˆèµ°äº†?", "Huh, how come he left again?"), where "Huh" (or "Huh?" or "What?") is acceptable translation. But English "Eh" indicates hesitation in speech ("His name is, eh, John Smith, I think").

Some interjections are completely inscrutable without translation. The Chinese "å“Žå‘€", pronounced [aija] in IPA or "aiya" in pinyin accepting different tones, is uttered for a big surprise. Conversely, English "uh-huh", meaning "yes" or "no" depending on which syllable has the stress, is completely unintelligible to a Chinese with no knowledge of English. This fact may not be immediately appreciated by the speaker, causing confusion in a conversation. There's no problem if I say "uh-huh" to a Chinese having lived in the US for some time, in an all-Chinese conversation. I may be lightly laughed at but well understood if I say it to a Chinese that has learned English for some time. But if I say it to my parents who know no English at all, they assume I didn't catch the part of the conversation right before this point.

Thus, we see that interjections, unlike words of other classes, are special in that the speaker unconsciously uses one unique to a specific language in the environment this language is spoken, even when he converses in another language, often his mother tongue. An interjection is not conspicuous to his mind that it may be just as language-specific as most other words.

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