This reminds me of a translation I saw for a spring themed song. Not the mechanical spring, the flowering one.
Japanese has three writing systems 漢字 which are essentially Chinese characters, the traditional kind rather than the simplified ones, ひらがな and カタカナ. They each complement one another and offer context, but sometimes you can also use different sets as a stylistic choice, which can deviate from general practise.
So there is this one line in the song
人ゴミを掻き分けては
Typically you’d write that first word with hiragana, 人ごみ, meaning crowd. ゴミ is a different word meaning rubbish, garbage, trash, litter, etc.
Whoever translated the song must’ve been decently new to the language, and did a valiant attempt, but they separated words out too much, and read 人ゴミ as two words, and 掻き分け again as two words.
人 person/people
ゴミ garbage
掻き arm stroke (like in swimming)
分 part/portion
And thus translated it to something like “the people rummaged through the trash.”
人ごみ crowd
掻き分ける push aside/push through
So the actual meaning was roughly “I made my way through the crowd”
This reminds me of a translation I saw for a spring themed song. Not the mechanical spring, the flowering one.
Japanese has three writing systems 漢字 which are essentially Chinese characters, the traditional kind rather than the simplified ones, ひらがな and カタカナ. They each complement one another and offer context, but sometimes you can also use different sets as a stylistic choice, which can deviate from general practise.
So there is this one line in the song
Typically you’d write that first word with hiragana, 人ごみ, meaning crowd. ゴミ is a different word meaning rubbish, garbage, trash, litter, etc.
Whoever translated the song must’ve been decently new to the language, and did a valiant attempt, but they separated words out too much, and read 人ゴミ as two words, and 掻き分け again as two words.
And thus translated it to something like “the people rummaged through the trash.”
So the actual meaning was roughly “I made my way through the crowd”
depending on the composition of the crowd the translation might hold up, e.g. trying to get through a crowd of tech CEO millionaires lol