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lil pimp prodigy
yeah u sayin its tru n oh yeah u forgot dat china showed japan there calligraphy so there won't b no kanji, hiragana, or katakana


Was....was that English?
by the way, its called Japanese
ENvivi
wannabe's aka wapanese xD

-.-
User Image“If only, if only,
the woodpecker sighs,
The bark on the tree was as soft as the skies....






Way to be stereotypical...

Honestly I don't see what is wrong with being bilingual(or more than two ^.^ heart )


User Image
The wolf waits below,
hungry and lonely,
And cries to the moon,
if only, if only...”
Universe full of Stars
and?
ENvivi
wannabe's aka wapanese xD

-.-


don't even use it around here cuz im learning how to speak japanese plus i live in japan so that is really offfensive especially gaijin's that can speak japanese fluently!!
ENvivi
wannabe's aka wapanese xD

-.-

most people find that word offensive...
you shouldnt use it here, there are very smart people in here

they just take the time to learn a different languaje, and you come here and judge them
thats not right...

Dapper Warlord

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ENvivi
wannabe's aka wapanese xD

-.-
What about wannabe's "aka wapanese"? 9.9

Grammatical error aside, where's your proof that anyone in here is a weeaboo? Knowing things about the Japanese language and it's history =/= wapanese.
wannabe's aka wapanese xD

-.-

Dapper Warlord

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Well, Hiragana and Katakana WERE derived from Kanji, so it is fair to say such.

The first was the Man'yogana system, where Chinese characters were chosen for phonetic value. (Similar to Ateji, which is still practiced today.) Several Chinese characters could represent any particular Japanese sound.

Katakana was the first purely Japanese script derived, and it was formed by taking portions from the Man'yogana (such as the radicals) and simplifying them. Hiragana was derived by writing the Man'yogana characters in a 'cursive' style (almost like the Chinese calligraphic 'grass style'). Sometimes, the Katakana and Hiragana were derived from the same Man'yogana, and sometimes they had different origins, but the kanji they were derived from shared the same phonetic origin.
I don't know if it is fair to say that hiragana and katakana were derived from kanji since kanji does tend to stand for a whole word and hiragana katakana are sets of syllables used to create words. And also, the derived Japanese culture did come from China MOSTLY but there are other cultures that are mixed in as well I believe. I think Korea is one of them.
yeah u sayin its tru n oh yeah u forgot dat china showed japan there calligraphy so there won't b no kanji, hiragana, or katakana
Three types of character are used to write Japanese. Although Japanese is a completely different language from Chinese, the characters used to write Japanese originally came from ancient China, where they are said to have been created thousands of years ago. These characters are called kanji and began as pictures. Over time the pictures changed, and most kanji no longer look like the original objects; they now stand for words or parts of words. There are about 2,000 kanji in regular use. Children learn 1,006 kanji in elementary school and another 939 in middle school.



In addition to kanji, Japanese has two sets of phonetic scripts, hiragana and katakana, both developed from kanji. Each set has 46 characters, which stand for syllables (usually including a consonant and a vowel, like "ka" wink . Combined with some extra dots used to mark changes of the original sounds, these characters are enough to express all the sounds of modern Japanese. Hiragana are used together with kanji to write ordinary Japanese words. Katakana are used to write words introduced from other languages, names of foreign people and places, sounds, and animal noises.



Japanese has many local dialects, called hogen. Different dialects have different words for the same things; there are also variations in accent and intonation, as well as in the endings attached to verbs and adjectives. Using the widely accepted standard spoken Japanese, however, people from different regions can communicate easily.

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