What does "Rice fields" mean?

What does "Rice fields" mean?

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Super Sonic

Original Poster:

4,961 posts

55 months

Tuesday 26th April 2022
quotequote all
Sometimes I look at Japanese Wikipedia translated by google into English, and occasionally find the two word exclamation "Rice fields" tacked onto the end of a sentence or paragraph. Is this a Japanese idiom? Anybody have any idea what it means?

Super Sonic

Original Poster:

4,961 posts

55 months

Wednesday 27th April 2022
quotequote all
Posted this late last night so it's possible nobody has seen it.
For this reason am giving it a bump.

Monkeylegend

26,479 posts

232 months

kurokawa

585 posts

109 months

Wednesday 27th April 2022
quotequote all
Super Sonic said:
Sometimes I look at Japanese Wikipedia translated by google into English, and occasionally find the two word exclamation "Rice fields" tacked onto the end of a sentence or paragraph. Is this a Japanese idiom? Anybody have any idea what it means?
If you could copy and paste the whole sentence, there are many words share similar pronunciation with meaning that miles apart and google translate would struggle with it

bigandclever

13,810 posts

239 months

Wednesday 27th April 2022
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I think this is right ... the character 'ta' as a noun means 'rice field'. However, when used as an auxiliary verb it means that the thing being spoken about is in the past.

So my guess is the passages refer to something historic and google translate isn't sophisticated enough to spot the context; so it uses the noun version by default and just plonks it in.

ETA this one .. see if this character is at the end of the passage; copy and paste the whole original into google translate; then remove the character and see if 'rice field' disappears.





Edited by bigandclever on Wednesday 27th April 13:53

Super Sonic

Original Poster:

4,961 posts

55 months

Wednesday 27th April 2022
quotequote all
[quote=bigandclever]I think this is right ... the character 'ta' as a noun means 'rice field'. However, when used as an auxiliary verb it means that the thing being spoken about is in the past.

So my guess is the passages refer to something historic and google translate isn't sophisticated enough to spot the context; so it uses the noun version by default and just plonks it in.

ETA this one .. see if this character is at the end of the passage; copy and paste the whole original into google translate; then remove the character and see if 'rice field' disappears.





Edited by bigandclever on Wednesday 27th April 13:53
[/quo That does seem to make sense, thanks :-)