How does 取材で訪れた integrate into this sentence?What about these particlesHow does...

Are dual Irish/British citizens bound by the 90/180 day rule when travelling in the EU after Brexit?

Do I need to be arrogant to get ahead?

Can a wizard cast a spell during their first turn of combat if they initiated combat by releasing a readied spell?

Is there a term for accumulated dirt on the outside of your hands and feet?

In Aliens, how many people were on LV-426 before the Marines arrived​?

Do native speakers use "ultima" and "proxima" frequently in spoken English?

If "dar" means "to give", what does "daros" mean?

Why didn't Héctor fade away after this character died in the movie Coco?

Existence of a celestial body big enough for early civilization to be thought of as a second moon

Geography in 3D perspective

Tikz: place node leftmost of two nodes of different widths

What should I install to correct "ld: cannot find -lgbm and -linput" so that I can compile a Rust program?

What does Jesus mean regarding "Raca," and "you fool?" - is he contrasting them?

When to use snap-off blade knife and when to use trapezoid blade knife?

Am I eligible for the Eurail Youth pass? I am 27.5 years old

How could an airship be repaired midflight?

Have the tides ever turned twice on any open problem?

What is the significance behind "40 days" that often appears in the Bible?

Should I use acronyms in dialogues before telling the readers what it stands for in fiction?

Synchronized implementation of a bank account in Java

Fewest number of steps to reach 200 using special calculator

Is it insecure to send a password in a `curl` command?

Calculate the frequency of characters in a string

Help rendering a complicated sum/product formula



How does 取材で訪れた integrate into this sentence?


What about these particlesHow does かもしれない integrate into this sentencewhy does this intransitive verb use が?Are these two topics in the same sentence?How to understand 余りと and 以降最も多くなった。What is meant by 人形を使ったおんぶ here?Which grammar structure does this sentence fit into?How to interprete 最大限活用しよう here?Why is there を coupled with potential form?How to interprete these は and parse the sentence













1















The sentence in question:
取材で訪れたとある街で「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」という会話が聞こえてきました。



For full context:
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20190314/k10011847731000.html?utm_int=news_contents_tokushu_004



My attempt at translation:
"In a certain city, a conversation became audible (saying): 'Marie Kondo has vanished from nowadays radio, hasn't it? Recently, one makes/pronounces it 'Konmarie'?'...."



Now as you can see, I didn't translate 取材で訪れた at all here. That's because I just have no idea how to do it xD



"In a news article appeared" is how I would translate the phrase in isolation.
However, I'm already confused WHERE to connect it to, or how.
Making it a "direct" attribute to とある街 didn't make sense in my attempts to form a comprehensible sentence. If I just "added" it to とある町 it would kind of work up to a certain point:



"In a news article appeared in a certain town a conversation (saying): '...'" but it goes terribly wrong once it collides with 聞こえてきました since no conversation can become "audible" in a news article. At least I understood it as a news article without any audio/audio-video content but just in plain written language.



Making it a relative attribute feels wrong to me:
"In a news article, which appeared in a certain town...". I can only think of this as being grammatical if the whole 取材で訪れたとある街で can be regarded as some sort of adverbial which is only loosely attached to the '[quote]という会話' phrase. But even there I wonder if this can be correct, because it basically leaves us with the same problem as in the first attempt 'In a news article...the conversation became audible' which simply doesnt make much sense to me.
Furthermore, I wonder if it is grammatical to do:
取材で[relative attribute]
???
Because, well, I assume that 取材で is kind of an adverbial itself, isn't it? And having an adverbial like this being modified by a relative attribute...I don't know, as you can see I'm thoroughly confused and utterly clueless on this and request your help :D










share|improve this question























  • 取材 does not mean "news article". 取材 is the act of collecting information/material for a news article or creative work of art (book, movie, game). Depending on what it is for, this could mean a variety of activities like conducting interviews, taking photos/recording video, doing investigative research, etc.

    – Setris
    1 hour ago
















1















The sentence in question:
取材で訪れたとある街で「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」という会話が聞こえてきました。



For full context:
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20190314/k10011847731000.html?utm_int=news_contents_tokushu_004



My attempt at translation:
"In a certain city, a conversation became audible (saying): 'Marie Kondo has vanished from nowadays radio, hasn't it? Recently, one makes/pronounces it 'Konmarie'?'...."



Now as you can see, I didn't translate 取材で訪れた at all here. That's because I just have no idea how to do it xD



"In a news article appeared" is how I would translate the phrase in isolation.
However, I'm already confused WHERE to connect it to, or how.
Making it a "direct" attribute to とある街 didn't make sense in my attempts to form a comprehensible sentence. If I just "added" it to とある町 it would kind of work up to a certain point:



"In a news article appeared in a certain town a conversation (saying): '...'" but it goes terribly wrong once it collides with 聞こえてきました since no conversation can become "audible" in a news article. At least I understood it as a news article without any audio/audio-video content but just in plain written language.



Making it a relative attribute feels wrong to me:
"In a news article, which appeared in a certain town...". I can only think of this as being grammatical if the whole 取材で訪れたとある街で can be regarded as some sort of adverbial which is only loosely attached to the '[quote]という会話' phrase. But even there I wonder if this can be correct, because it basically leaves us with the same problem as in the first attempt 'In a news article...the conversation became audible' which simply doesnt make much sense to me.
Furthermore, I wonder if it is grammatical to do:
取材で[relative attribute]
???
Because, well, I assume that 取材で is kind of an adverbial itself, isn't it? And having an adverbial like this being modified by a relative attribute...I don't know, as you can see I'm thoroughly confused and utterly clueless on this and request your help :D










share|improve this question























  • 取材 does not mean "news article". 取材 is the act of collecting information/material for a news article or creative work of art (book, movie, game). Depending on what it is for, this could mean a variety of activities like conducting interviews, taking photos/recording video, doing investigative research, etc.

    – Setris
    1 hour ago














1












1








1








The sentence in question:
取材で訪れたとある街で「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」という会話が聞こえてきました。



For full context:
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20190314/k10011847731000.html?utm_int=news_contents_tokushu_004



My attempt at translation:
"In a certain city, a conversation became audible (saying): 'Marie Kondo has vanished from nowadays radio, hasn't it? Recently, one makes/pronounces it 'Konmarie'?'...."



Now as you can see, I didn't translate 取材で訪れた at all here. That's because I just have no idea how to do it xD



"In a news article appeared" is how I would translate the phrase in isolation.
However, I'm already confused WHERE to connect it to, or how.
Making it a "direct" attribute to とある街 didn't make sense in my attempts to form a comprehensible sentence. If I just "added" it to とある町 it would kind of work up to a certain point:



"In a news article appeared in a certain town a conversation (saying): '...'" but it goes terribly wrong once it collides with 聞こえてきました since no conversation can become "audible" in a news article. At least I understood it as a news article without any audio/audio-video content but just in plain written language.



Making it a relative attribute feels wrong to me:
"In a news article, which appeared in a certain town...". I can only think of this as being grammatical if the whole 取材で訪れたとある街で can be regarded as some sort of adverbial which is only loosely attached to the '[quote]という会話' phrase. But even there I wonder if this can be correct, because it basically leaves us with the same problem as in the first attempt 'In a news article...the conversation became audible' which simply doesnt make much sense to me.
Furthermore, I wonder if it is grammatical to do:
取材で[relative attribute]
???
Because, well, I assume that 取材で is kind of an adverbial itself, isn't it? And having an adverbial like this being modified by a relative attribute...I don't know, as you can see I'm thoroughly confused and utterly clueless on this and request your help :D










share|improve this question














The sentence in question:
取材で訪れたとある街で「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」という会話が聞こえてきました。



For full context:
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20190314/k10011847731000.html?utm_int=news_contents_tokushu_004



My attempt at translation:
"In a certain city, a conversation became audible (saying): 'Marie Kondo has vanished from nowadays radio, hasn't it? Recently, one makes/pronounces it 'Konmarie'?'...."



Now as you can see, I didn't translate 取材で訪れた at all here. That's because I just have no idea how to do it xD



"In a news article appeared" is how I would translate the phrase in isolation.
However, I'm already confused WHERE to connect it to, or how.
Making it a "direct" attribute to とある街 didn't make sense in my attempts to form a comprehensible sentence. If I just "added" it to とある町 it would kind of work up to a certain point:



"In a news article appeared in a certain town a conversation (saying): '...'" but it goes terribly wrong once it collides with 聞こえてきました since no conversation can become "audible" in a news article. At least I understood it as a news article without any audio/audio-video content but just in plain written language.



Making it a relative attribute feels wrong to me:
"In a news article, which appeared in a certain town...". I can only think of this as being grammatical if the whole 取材で訪れたとある街で can be regarded as some sort of adverbial which is only loosely attached to the '[quote]という会話' phrase. But even there I wonder if this can be correct, because it basically leaves us with the same problem as in the first attempt 'In a news article...the conversation became audible' which simply doesnt make much sense to me.
Furthermore, I wonder if it is grammatical to do:
取材で[relative attribute]
???
Because, well, I assume that 取材で is kind of an adverbial itself, isn't it? And having an adverbial like this being modified by a relative attribute...I don't know, as you can see I'm thoroughly confused and utterly clueless on this and request your help :D







grammar






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 3 hours ago









NarktorNarktor

2,9051417




2,9051417













  • 取材 does not mean "news article". 取材 is the act of collecting information/material for a news article or creative work of art (book, movie, game). Depending on what it is for, this could mean a variety of activities like conducting interviews, taking photos/recording video, doing investigative research, etc.

    – Setris
    1 hour ago



















  • 取材 does not mean "news article". 取材 is the act of collecting information/material for a news article or creative work of art (book, movie, game). Depending on what it is for, this could mean a variety of activities like conducting interviews, taking photos/recording video, doing investigative research, etc.

    – Setris
    1 hour ago

















取材 does not mean "news article". 取材 is the act of collecting information/material for a news article or creative work of art (book, movie, game). Depending on what it is for, this could mean a variety of activities like conducting interviews, taking photos/recording video, doing investigative research, etc.

– Setris
1 hour ago





取材 does not mean "news article". 取材 is the act of collecting information/material for a news article or creative work of art (book, movie, game). Depending on what it is for, this could mean a variety of activities like conducting interviews, taking photos/recording video, doing investigative research, etc.

– Setris
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















4














取材で訪れる means "visit ~~ to collect data / gather material / for coverage / for an interview".



So 取材で訪れたとある街 means "a town that I visited to gather material" (取材で訪れた is a relative clause modifying とある街).




[取材で訪れた]とある街 -- a town [that I visited to gather material]

cf.

[仕事で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited on business]

[休暇で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited for vacation]




会話が聞こえてきました here means "I overheard a conversation".



「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」

"Marie Kondo was on the radio today. Have you been KonMari-ing recently?"



 






share|improve this answer























    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function() {
    var channelOptions = {
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "257"
    };
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
    createEditor();
    });
    }
    else {
    createEditor();
    }
    });

    function createEditor() {
    StackExchange.prepareEditor({
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader: {
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    },
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    });


    }
    });














    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function () {
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fjapanese.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f66062%2fhow-does-%25e5%258f%2596%25e6%259d%2590%25e3%2581%25a7%25e8%25a8%25aa%25e3%2582%258c%25e3%2581%259f-integrate-into-this-sentence%23new-answer', 'question_page');
    }
    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    4














    取材で訪れる means "visit ~~ to collect data / gather material / for coverage / for an interview".



    So 取材で訪れたとある街 means "a town that I visited to gather material" (取材で訪れた is a relative clause modifying とある街).




    [取材で訪れた]とある街 -- a town [that I visited to gather material]

    cf.

    [仕事で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited on business]

    [休暇で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited for vacation]




    会話が聞こえてきました here means "I overheard a conversation".



    「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」

    "Marie Kondo was on the radio today. Have you been KonMari-ing recently?"



     






    share|improve this answer




























      4














      取材で訪れる means "visit ~~ to collect data / gather material / for coverage / for an interview".



      So 取材で訪れたとある街 means "a town that I visited to gather material" (取材で訪れた is a relative clause modifying とある街).




      [取材で訪れた]とある街 -- a town [that I visited to gather material]

      cf.

      [仕事で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited on business]

      [休暇で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited for vacation]




      会話が聞こえてきました here means "I overheard a conversation".



      「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」

      "Marie Kondo was on the radio today. Have you been KonMari-ing recently?"



       






      share|improve this answer


























        4












        4








        4







        取材で訪れる means "visit ~~ to collect data / gather material / for coverage / for an interview".



        So 取材で訪れたとある街 means "a town that I visited to gather material" (取材で訪れた is a relative clause modifying とある街).




        [取材で訪れた]とある街 -- a town [that I visited to gather material]

        cf.

        [仕事で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited on business]

        [休暇で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited for vacation]




        会話が聞こえてきました here means "I overheard a conversation".



        「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」

        "Marie Kondo was on the radio today. Have you been KonMari-ing recently?"



         






        share|improve this answer













        取材で訪れる means "visit ~~ to collect data / gather material / for coverage / for an interview".



        So 取材で訪れたとある街 means "a town that I visited to gather material" (取材で訪れた is a relative clause modifying とある街).




        [取材で訪れた]とある街 -- a town [that I visited to gather material]

        cf.

        [仕事で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited on business]

        [休暇で訪れた]街 -- a town [that I visited for vacation]




        会話が聞こえてきました here means "I overheard a conversation".



        「きょうのラジオで近藤麻理恵が出ていたよね。最近“こんまり”している?」

        "Marie Kondo was on the radio today. Have you been KonMari-ing recently?"



         







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 hours ago









        ChocolateChocolate

        48.4k459122




        48.4k459122






























            draft saved

            draft discarded




















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Japanese Language Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fjapanese.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f66062%2fhow-does-%25e5%258f%2596%25e6%259d%2590%25e3%2581%25a7%25e8%25a8%25aa%25e3%2582%258c%25e3%2581%259f-integrate-into-this-sentence%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Paper upload error, “Upload failed: The top margin is 0.715 in on page 3, which is below the required...

            Emraan Hashmi Filmografia | Linki zewnętrzne | Menu nawigacyjneGulshan GroverGulshan...

            How can I write this formula?newline and italics added with leqWhy does widehat behave differently if I...