Skip to main content

Talk like a Singaporean

Some of you may remember the Bangles hit Walk Like an Egyptian. I never quite understood the appeal of that song but I'd say the Bangles had a number of better songs. Anyway, this song has nothing to do with what I'm writing about today. It's just that 'Talk like a Singaporean' reminded me of 'Walk Like an Egyptian'.

We were happily enjoying some pasta yesterday and this man walked past and said to his children, 'Wah, they are eating spare-kati (as in katis and tahils)'. Ok lah, maybe we can't blame people for mispronouncing the word because spaghetti isn't even a real English word anyway. I've also heard it called 'spatter-gi'.

Then there was this announcement for some staff member to 'proceed to la-verr tree (level three). You know how some Singaporeans pronounce 'th' as 't', the word-ending 'l' as 'r' and also the short vowel 'e' (as in 'level') as the long vowel 'a' (as in the word 'as'). Try saying 'la-verr tree'. Yup, sounds like lavatory (when pronounced correctly).

I also remember how the use of 'proceed' in this way used to really irritate a former expat colleague of mine. Every time he heard it, he would wring his hands and exclaim 'Why can't they just say go?'

Definitely, Singaporeans have some of the weirdest ways of speaking. However, although I sometimes find our language usage rather grating and cringe-y (such as when your plane touches down at Changi Airport and someone announces that if you get caught for drug trafficking, you will face the death penulty -- yuck, yuck), I think it's part of Singaporean culture.

Now, on to very bad Singaporean behaviour. I was flipping through an assessment book (one of a very small collection of such things in this house) that my son has done some parts of and realised to my horror that further down in the book, there were exercises that were already done and marked!! And you know what, there was more than one child's handwriting, different coloured pen ink and different markers' handwriting. Which means that there's more than one pair of perpatrators. How could parents (most likely, I think) or older siblings or whoever marked those exercises allow this to happen? Either they did and marked the exercises at the shop or brought the book in for exchange after using it and deciding that they didn't want it. That's really disgusting.

Never knew one had to check assessment books before buying them.

Comments

fuzzoo said…
Ya lor, Singaporean talk is like that one. What makes me cringe is how some people pronounce "children" as "chew-dren". urghh!!! Unfortunately my hubby is one of them!!!

I stumbled upon your blog from Good Morning Singapore. Like your posts.
fuzzoo said…
oh i mean good morning yesterday :)
Lam Chun See said…
More than a few times I encounter this when I visit companies. The receptionist asks me to take a seat and then calls up the person and says loudly; "There's a guy here to see you."
Anonymous said…
Hello Fuzzoo,
Welcome to my blog! Wow, you are thinking about the PSLE already? I've just read some of your posts. You know, my son had problems with that 'more than/ less than' thing too and it was only after some weeks of different 'teaching strategies' by me and his father that he finally saw the light. All of a sudden.

Hi Mr Lam,
That's funny. And what about those places where there's a reception counter but the people actually sit some distance away from it. When you get there, no one really bothers and when you say 'Excuse me', someone looks up and says, 'Ya?'
fuzzoo said…
I've given up trying to teach my daughter "more than/less than". If she gets it wrong, so be it. I figured she will get it right as her English gets stronger.

Popular posts from this blog

A lesson in love

I am a little pencil in the hand of a writing God who is sending a love letter to the world. -Mother Teresa Most of the time my eyes just glaze over when I see article upon article of football news. One caught my glazing eye over the weekend, though - 'De la Cruz - Mother Theresa in boots' , because of the familiar name. Mother Teresa, that is. It was the first time I’d ever heard of this de la Cruz guy, an EPL player who hails from Ecuador (GNI per capita US$2,630; as a comparison, Singapore’s is US$27, 490 – source: BBC country profiles ). His is a great story to illustrate that famous Chinese saying about not forgetting your roots. According to the article, ‘Each month a proportion of that salary (about S$150,000) Reading pay him - be it 10 per cent in January or 20 per cent in February - goes direct to the village’ (where he grew up). (Picture and profile from here ) Here's what he has been credited for: 1. 'The 2002 World Cup,' de la Cruz reflects, 'finan...

True train school

‘Having eyes, but not seeing beauty; having ears, but not hearing music; having minds, but not perceiving truth; having hearts that are never moved and therefore never set on fire. These are the things to fear, said the headmaster.’ How would you like to have such a headmaster? I finally re-read (read it first as a teenager) Totto-chan, The Little Girl at the Window , a ‘school story’ by Tetsuko Kuroyanagi, translated by Dorothy Britton. Totto-chan is the name Tesuko Kuroyanagi called herself, and the book is about her life during her school days at Tomoe Gakuen. Totto-chan was expelled from her first elementary school because of her ‘disruptive’ behaviour, which included constantly opening and closing her desk top (because she was so thrilled by it), ‘vandalising’ her desk (because there wasn’t enough space on the piece of paper to draw) and standing by the classroom window waiting for street musicians to pass by or talking to swallows. Her mother, although probably alarmed about the ...

When the best man doesn't win

Speaking of 'sway' spurned lovers, the latest one I've come across is in Love Revolution ( only 12 episodes!), a J show I recently watched. Heroine of the story is pretty, 30-ish Smart Doctor, who is dying to fall in love and get married. She meets Aspiring Actor and Broadcast Journalist (right). She falls for Broadcast Journalist like a ton of bricks. It's obvious from the start (to the audience but not to her) that Aspiring Actor is nuts about her. But... she has fallen for Broadcast Journalist like a ton of bricks already. No doubt, Smart Doctor and Broadcast Journalist must be given credit for their love that stands the tests of time, separation and misunderstanding, but the one who loves most in the show is undoubtedly Mr Aspiring Actor. What he does/does not do because of his undying love for Smart Doctor: Y does not pursue her at first because he is still struggling to survive in this small-time drama group and he knows he doesn't have much to offer Y resp...