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Talk:Eijanaika (film)

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Title translation

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I've heard the title translated various ways; here as "Why not" and "ain't it great?", otherwise in my experience as "What the hell!" I suspect it's a somewhat-untranslatable saying (like "so desu ka"), but could someone with good knowledge in Japanese give a shot at capturing the meaning? --BlackAndy 02:54, 13 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I have little knowledge in Japanese, but as far as I can see, "ee" is "yes", "janai" is a short form of "ja arimasen", which means "is not", and "ka" marks the sentence as a question, so literally it means "yes, isn't it?", I think. Janquark (talk) 17:25, 5 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Word-for-word:
  • Ee is a variant of いい (ii) meaning "good".
  • Ja is a contraction of では (de wa), a particle combination used to introduce a negative statement.
  • Nai is plain old ない (nai) meaning "not, it isn't".
  • The ka on the end is (ka), the explicit question marker.
As a construction pattern, じゃない (~ ja nai ka) is similar to English phrasing like "isn't it XYZ?", used both as a question and as a rhetorical device meaning "it is XYZ". ‑‑ Eiríkr Útlendi │Tala við mig 04:38, 12 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]
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Historicity

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From Ee ja nai ka:

In 1981, Japanese director Shohei Imamura produced his film Eijanaika, which gives a deliberately historically incorrect interpretation of the events but nevertheless catches the unstable and tense atmosphere of the age.

I was expecting this article to discuss the historicity of the film. --Error (talk) 16:52, 9 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]