Welcome, PaperModelers.com people! Legend has it, user 8ThMonth found this page long ago, and has gotten many good links from it. That's just lovely! Let's move along then.
This
page is designed to give you Japanese paper model-related words
for use in internet text searches. Any unicode-compatible browser
(IE 5.0 and up) should be capable of displaying the Japanese text
on this page.
Okay
folks, let's find some Japanese (and Chinese) Paper Models, shall
we?
Some
general pronunciation notes
(skip this part if you want):
Japanese
vowels are pronounced the same as Spanish vowels. A="ought,"
I="eat" U="soup," E="eggs,"
and O="open." Easier than it looks.
You
will notice that the words kaadomoderu and peepaakurafuto
have extended vowel sounds (the horizontal line in the Japanese
text). Thus the "pee" in peepaa is not pronounced
like the "pee" in "peeping tom," but more like
"pay." Peepaa in Japanese sounds kind of like the
Aussie pronunciation of "paper."
The
best way I've found to describe the pronunciation of the Japanese
"r" sound is as a light "d" sound mixed with
an "r". In other words, you don't say it so hard as to
sound like a "d", but it shouldn't sound like "arrrrrrr"
(matey)
Anyhow,
good luck with that. On with the show.
Search
Terms:
Okay,
here are terms you can copy and paste into your favorite search
engine, in order of search worthiness: Note: you may need to fiddle
with your browser's encoding settings to properly display Google
results, etc. In IE, go to View > Encoding > Japanese >
Auto-detect.
- ペーパークラフト
[Google
me]
peepaakurafuto "paper
craft" (this one is easy to spot with a little practice)
- 紙模型 [Google
me]
kamimokei "paper
modeling/models" BONUS! This one works in Chinese
too - have fun! :)
- 紙工作 [Google
me]
kamikousaku "paper
construction"
- カードモデル
[Google
me] kaadomoderu "card model(s)" (there
are no plural forms of the nouns on this page—that makes our work
easier) Note:
I have seen kaadomoderu
used exactly twice in referring to our hobby. This one
isn't usually going to find you what you are looking for, but
I've included it in case more Japanese start using it. Right now
they use it to say, in essence, "okay, some English speakers
call it 'card modeling', not paper craft."
Other
helpful terms:
These
terms can be useful if you are looking for assembly instructions.
作り方
tsukurikata "assembly method" (lit. "way to
make")
組み立て kumitate
"assembly/construction"
方法 houhou
"method"
説明 setsumei
"explanation"
Now,
don't expect to be able to walk up to a Japanese person and be understood
when you ask them if they're familiar with "peepaakurafuto"
or "kamimokei."Our hobby may be more common in Japan than
in some other countries, but it is still by no means mainstream.
I
once asked some employees at a Japanese bookstore if they had any
papercraft books or books on paper modeling. The idea of paper craft
wasn't completely foreign to them ("you mean things like origami
or finger puppets, right?"), but when I mentioned paper modeling,
boy were they surprised ("you mean people actually build models
out of paper?!"). I've had similar experiences with other Japanese
friends. So this isn't some sort of huge thing over there.
Hope
all this helps! Have fun. And don't forget to post
photos of your finished builds.
-Marc
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