jrjones9933 wrote:
Yes, I speak good English without a drawl.
I have been asked if I am mainland Chinese/Taiwanese.
When I speak in Chinese/Mandarin, I try my best to speak grammatically and pronounce the words correctly. Personally I think people in mainland China and Taiwan (where Chinese is the working language) have better vocabulary and a more refined accent. I try to speak well without putting on an accent which doesn't come naturally to me, and not use words I do not fully understand.
I find that most of my Chinese Singaporean peers speak half the time in Chinese and the other half of the time in English. They could start a sentence in say, English, and switch to Chinese halfway till the end of the sentence. Throw in the Chinese dialect and Malay words, and maybe even Japanese among a group of friends who all know Japanese, and you might be hearing as many as 5 tongues in a conversation. I have learnt to decipher the meaning of what I hear people in school say, but I can't speak like that myself. When I do use more than one language in a conversation it's because
1. I am chatting in Chinese and I don't know what the Chinese equivalent of a medical/technical term is.
2. I am chatting in English. I don't know how to express how I feel about something, precisely describe somebody's behaviour or a trend. I have a word/phrase in Chinese or one of its dialects, Malay or Japanese (depending on who I am speaking with) to describe it. I use that word/phrase.
Otherwise, the main structure of what I am saying is in either English or Chinese.
(Anyone else have this problem?)
Another reason people have given for asking if I am a foreigner is because they say I "don't look Singaporean", or look more like a Malaysian/Taiwanese. To state my observations, I noticed that from secondary school, all the girls' faces seem to look more and more alike. (Though I am mildly faceblind, I don't think it's the faceblindness in this case.) And the face I see in the mirror is different from those multiple faces I see a lot in school.
I remember a conversation with one guy in a high school class:
Classmate: Are you Taiwanese?
Me: No I am not, I was born here and have been studying here all my life.
Classmate: But you've got to be, you must be!
As he did not elaborate his reasons for thinking so, I had to figure out why he said that by thinking of how differently I behave from the so-called "typical Singaporean youth".
Last edited by whiterat on 07 Oct 2011, 5:20 am, edited 1 time in total.