Nonsense Syllable in Songs?
de NJ Esperantist, 30 de marzo de 2016
Aportes: 16
Idioma: English
NJ Esperantist (Mostrar perfil) 30 de marzo de 2016 01:45:58
erinja (Mostrar perfil) 30 de marzo de 2016 11:23:18
Alkanadi (Mostrar perfil) 30 de marzo de 2016 13:30:07
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOv8nG2mAWk
NJ Esperantist (Mostrar perfil) 30 de marzo de 2016 14:11:49
NJ Esperantist (Mostrar perfil) 30 de marzo de 2016 14:12:58
Alkanadi:You mean like this?Sort of.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOv8nG2mAWk
erinja (Mostrar perfil) 30 de marzo de 2016 14:55:54
I've heard of plenty songs using "nai nai nai" as the nonsense syllable, without worrying that it sounds just like the word "nigh", or "dum dum dum" without worrying that it conflates with "dumb"
NJ Esperantist (Mostrar perfil) 30 de marzo de 2016 15:39:49
Pathu5 (Mostrar perfil) 30 de marzo de 2016 16:04:06
erinja:I think "du du du" is fine, no one would ever mistake it for "two" in the context.I would add a famous example of this: The Boxer by Simon and Garfunkel. Though the syllable is "lai lai lai," Nobody confuses it for the word "lie."
I've heard of plenty songs using "nai nai nai" as the nonsense syllable, without worrying that it sounds just like the word "nigh", or "dum dum dum" without worrying that it conflates with "dumb"
Likewise, Do Re Mi from Sound of Music points out the similar sounds of nonsense/musical syllables and real words as a memory tactic.
NJ Esperantist (Mostrar perfil) 11 de abril de 2016 17:13:35
Christa627 (Mostrar perfil) 22 de abril de 2016 05:38:36
erinja:I think "du du du" is fine, no one would ever mistake it for "two" in the context.Once I translated "Deck the Halls" into toki pona, and someone objected to my using "la" as a nonsense syllable, since it's a tp syntactic word. But I'm like, no real person is going to try to parse "a la la la la" as anything grammatical! I don't think anyone else was worried about it, though.
I've heard of plenty songs using "nai nai nai" as the nonsense syllable, without worrying that it sounds just like the word "nigh", or "dum dum dum" without worrying that it conflates with "dumb"
Sorry I'm a bit off-topic; that's just what came to mind...