How does 取材で訪れた integrate into this 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
    2 hours 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
    2 hours 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






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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
    2 hours 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
    2 hours 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
2 hours 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
2 hours ago










1 Answer
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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?"



 






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    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?"



     






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      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?"



         







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        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 hours ago









        ChocolateChocolate

        48.4k459122




        48.4k459122






























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