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to see a doctor

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to see a doctor



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Why are there many kanji that are read and mean the same?Is there an equivalent to George Carlin's “Seven Dirty Words” in Japanese?Why are these words considered less politically correct?understanding hōgejaku — an archaic imperative?What is the correct way of saying “see you”?Understanding correct choice on N1 grammar questionThree conflicting interpretations of “ことになりそう”Help with さすが大学に行っただけのことはあるChaining sentences, and past formHow does this passage change the topics of discussion so quickly?Why do I often see guys saying 何をしているの










1















I found two different translations for "going to see a doctor," and I was wondering which contexts you would use each in.



The first is 受診じゅしんする which is defined on jisho.org as "having a medical examination; seeing a doctor​."



The other option I found on jisho was (医者に)見てもらう。My understanding of this is that a literal translation would be "I received the favor of (being seen by) a doctor."



The first translation makes sense in that it literally refers to the examination. However, if you wanted to say, "I'm going to see a doctor [at a specific time]" (like tomorrow, today, etc) which one of these phrases would you pick? How would this be different from indicating continuing care by saying "I am being seen by a doctor" (on a continuing basis)?



Thanks, folks!










share|improve this question


























    1















    I found two different translations for "going to see a doctor," and I was wondering which contexts you would use each in.



    The first is 受診じゅしんする which is defined on jisho.org as "having a medical examination; seeing a doctor​."



    The other option I found on jisho was (医者に)見てもらう。My understanding of this is that a literal translation would be "I received the favor of (being seen by) a doctor."



    The first translation makes sense in that it literally refers to the examination. However, if you wanted to say, "I'm going to see a doctor [at a specific time]" (like tomorrow, today, etc) which one of these phrases would you pick? How would this be different from indicating continuing care by saying "I am being seen by a doctor" (on a continuing basis)?



    Thanks, folks!










    share|improve this question
























      1












      1








      1








      I found two different translations for "going to see a doctor," and I was wondering which contexts you would use each in.



      The first is 受診じゅしんする which is defined on jisho.org as "having a medical examination; seeing a doctor​."



      The other option I found on jisho was (医者に)見てもらう。My understanding of this is that a literal translation would be "I received the favor of (being seen by) a doctor."



      The first translation makes sense in that it literally refers to the examination. However, if you wanted to say, "I'm going to see a doctor [at a specific time]" (like tomorrow, today, etc) which one of these phrases would you pick? How would this be different from indicating continuing care by saying "I am being seen by a doctor" (on a continuing basis)?



      Thanks, folks!










      share|improve this question














      I found two different translations for "going to see a doctor," and I was wondering which contexts you would use each in.



      The first is 受診じゅしんする which is defined on jisho.org as "having a medical examination; seeing a doctor​."



      The other option I found on jisho was (医者に)見てもらう。My understanding of this is that a literal translation would be "I received the favor of (being seen by) a doctor."



      The first translation makes sense in that it literally refers to the examination. However, if you wanted to say, "I'm going to see a doctor [at a specific time]" (like tomorrow, today, etc) which one of these phrases would you pick? How would this be different from indicating continuing care by saying "I am being seen by a doctor" (on a continuing basis)?



      Thanks, folks!







      translation word-choice






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 5 hours ago









      misatomisato

      412




      412




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3














          You can use both:




          • 明日(病院を)受診します。

          • 明日(医者に)見てもらいます。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科を受診しています。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科の先生に見てもらっています。



          Difference:



          • 受診 sounds relatively more objective and formal because it's a kango (See: wago-and-kango). But it's safe also in casual conversations.

          • 受診 can take an institute name as a direct object.

          • As you already know, てもらう carries some nuance of "receiving favor", but it's not an issue unless you dislike the doctor.

          As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る.






          share|improve this answer























          • As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る. Doesn't it have to be 診る? I've never see it as 見る in this context.

            – istrasci
            2 hours ago











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          3














          You can use both:




          • 明日(病院を)受診します。

          • 明日(医者に)見てもらいます。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科を受診しています。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科の先生に見てもらっています。



          Difference:



          • 受診 sounds relatively more objective and formal because it's a kango (See: wago-and-kango). But it's safe also in casual conversations.

          • 受診 can take an institute name as a direct object.

          • As you already know, てもらう carries some nuance of "receiving favor", but it's not an issue unless you dislike the doctor.

          As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る.






          share|improve this answer























          • As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る. Doesn't it have to be 診る? I've never see it as 見る in this context.

            – istrasci
            2 hours ago















          3














          You can use both:




          • 明日(病院を)受診します。

          • 明日(医者に)見てもらいます。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科を受診しています。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科の先生に見てもらっています。



          Difference:



          • 受診 sounds relatively more objective and formal because it's a kango (See: wago-and-kango). But it's safe also in casual conversations.

          • 受診 can take an institute name as a direct object.

          • As you already know, てもらう carries some nuance of "receiving favor", but it's not an issue unless you dislike the doctor.

          As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る.






          share|improve this answer























          • As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る. Doesn't it have to be 診る? I've never see it as 見る in this context.

            – istrasci
            2 hours ago













          3












          3








          3







          You can use both:




          • 明日(病院を)受診します。

          • 明日(医者に)見てもらいます。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科を受診しています。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科の先生に見てもらっています。



          Difference:



          • 受診 sounds relatively more objective and formal because it's a kango (See: wago-and-kango). But it's safe also in casual conversations.

          • 受診 can take an institute name as a direct object.

          • As you already know, てもらう carries some nuance of "receiving favor", but it's not an issue unless you dislike the doctor.

          As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る.






          share|improve this answer













          You can use both:




          • 明日(病院を)受診します。

          • 明日(医者に)見てもらいます。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科を受診しています。

          • (月に2回)皮膚科の先生に見てもらっています。



          Difference:



          • 受診 sounds relatively more objective and formal because it's a kango (See: wago-and-kango). But it's safe also in casual conversations.

          • 受診 can take an institute name as a direct object.

          • As you already know, てもらう carries some nuance of "receiving favor", but it's not an issue unless you dislike the doctor.

          As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 4 hours ago









          narutonaruto

          166k8160318




          166k8160318












          • As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る. Doesn't it have to be 診る? I've never see it as 見る in this context.

            – istrasci
            2 hours ago

















          • As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る. Doesn't it have to be 診る? I've never see it as 見る in this context.

            – istrasci
            2 hours ago
















          As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る. Doesn't it have to be 診る? I've never see it as 見る in this context.

          – istrasci
          2 hours ago





          As an aside, 見る can be replaced by 診る. Doesn't it have to be 診る? I've never see it as 見る in this context.

          – istrasci
          2 hours ago

















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