Once upon a time, there was a grandfather...

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tzfujimino

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Dec 8, 2007
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English Teacher
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Japanese
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Japan
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Japan
Hello.:)
'Once upon a time, there was an old man ...' is often used in storytelling.
Is 'Once upon a time, there was a grandfather ...' possible?

(I know they don't mean the same, but the problem is that we have exactly the same Japanese word for 'a grandfather (grandmother)' and 'an elderly/old man (woman)'. We use the word in storytelling.)

Thank you.
 
If he had kids who had kids, yes. But yes, "grandfather" does tend to make one think of an older man.
 
Many a grandparent is under 30.
 
Many? A baby at 15, who had a baby at 14?

In any case, if you used "grandfather" instead of simply "old man" I would expect his children/grandchildren to figure in the story somehow.
 
Many? A baby at 15, who had a baby at 14?

It depends on your definition of "many" but unfortunately in quite a lot of areas of the UK, the daughter of a teenage mother is very likely to go on to become a teenage mother herself. Perhaps not 14 or 15, but certainly 16-year-old mothers are more common than most of us think is sensible/acceptable. A few months ago, a 13-year-old girl and her 11-year-old boyfriend had a baby. :shock:
 
Teen pregnancy is a big problem in the U.S. as well -- although a grandparent at 30 would be rare.


--lotus
 
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