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who's your fave inuyasha character!? |
Kagome |
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25% |
[ 2 ] |
Sango |
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25% |
[ 2 ] |
Kikyo |
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25% |
[ 2 ] |
Shipo |
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0% |
[ 0 ] |
miroku |
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0% |
[ 0 ] |
Inuyasha |
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25% |
[ 2 ] |
kouga |
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0% |
[ 0 ] |
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Total Votes : 8 |
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Posted: Sat Jul 23, 2005 7:00 pm
Hey i always wanted to learn japinesse it sounds so fun to learn so i f anyone knows a few words they can tell me i really apperate it biggrin [imgleft]inu family[/imgleft]
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Posted: Sat Jul 23, 2005 7:51 pm
Sry i dont know Japanesse or anything i just think that it would be really cool to learn that too.... so if you learn anything then can you tell me too...lol...thanx
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Posted: Sat Jul 23, 2005 7:56 pm
sure i learned some rate now
hai-Yes IIya-No Kitsune-Fox Neko-Cat
Enjoy 4laugh
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Posted: Sat Jul 23, 2005 7:59 pm
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Posted: Sat Jul 23, 2005 10:28 pm
I no alot of japanesse in karate it suqs A WARNING DONT JOIN!!!! crying
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Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 12:05 am
Hajimemashite = How do you do? Hai-yes iie-no Kitsune Hanyou desu (pronounced des) -It is Kitsune Hanyou kitsune-fox inu-dog neko-cat inu desu-It is a dog (and/or dogs) neko desu ka -Is it a cat? Watashi wa Kitsune Hanyou -I am Kitsune Hanyou inu no Kitsune Hanyou- Kitsune Hanyou's dog Mitsuke no Oujuo: is Angel of Death Doi Tasha Mashtia: your welcome
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Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2005 7:11 am
Kawaii-cute Baka!-Idiot, moron, stupid...(Basiclly a word for all of those.) Arigatou-Thank you (I hope I spelled it right.)
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Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2005 10:07 am
Thank you to the people who helpe dme learn japinesse
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Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2005 10:18 am
Sayonara = Good bye.
Ittekimasu = Good bye. (When your going somewhere like school or work and you'll be back home shortly)
Tadaima = I'm back/ returned (This is when you come back after that time you said ittekimasu.)
Onegaishimasu = Please
Yoroshiku = Treat me nicely.
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Posted: Sun Jul 31, 2005 5:14 pm
Japanese Here's a list of features of the Japanese language:
1) Small set of easy-to-pronounce consonants: k, s, t, n, h, m, y, r, w, g, z, d, b, p
2) Small set of almost totally universal vowels: a, i, u, e, o
3) Extremely simple syllable structure of Consonant-Vowel
* Allows for diphthongs (ai), syllable-initial vowels (ara), geminated consonants (atta), and syllable-final -n (ban).
* Allows for palatalized versions of the consonants: ky, sy (sh), ty (ch), ny, hy, my, ry, gy, zy (j), dy (j), by, and py. None of these are hard to pronounce (except maybe the "ry" but that's learned quickly enough).
* t becomes ch before i, and ts before u. * s becomes sh before i. * d becomes j before i, and z before u. * z becomes j before i.
* there is no wi, wu, or we, nor is there a yi or ye (at least, not in modern Japanese).
4) Word order is Subject-Object-Verb (English word order is Subject-Verb-Object). Japanese verbs ALWAYS go on the end of a clause or sentence (only rhetorical sounds like, "ne" or "yo" etc . . . can follow).
5) Adjectives precede the nouns they modify, just as they do in English.
6) Appositions are postpositional rather than prepositional: English - "in the house"; Japanese - "uchi (house) ni (in)."
7) Japanese does not make any distinction between singular or plural: ringo = an apple, the apple, apples.
cool Japanese uses several postpositions to indicate grammatical function like Latin does, unlike English, which only uses its prepositions to indicate spacial or temporal relationships.
Post positions include: * wa = topic particle * ga = subject particle * no = posessive particle * ni = to/in/at/on * e = to/toward * de = at/with/using (as in hit a ball WITH a bat) * kara = from * yori = than/from * mo = too * to = and/together/with * ka = or
there are others.
9) Like English, Japanese makes extensive use of auxillary, or grammatical zed verbs, such as "to be," "to go," "to have," and "to come," as well as many others to perform complex grammatical conjugations:
*English - I am eating an apple. Japanese - Watashi ga ringo o tabete iru = watash (I) ga (subject-postposition) ringo (apple) o (direct object postposition) tabete (eating) iru (am).
*English - You can't go doing that! Japanese - Sore o shite wa ikenai! = sore (that) o (direct object postposition) shite (doing) wa (topic postposition) ikenai (cannot go).
10) Japanese, unlike English, aslo has several interesting conjunctions for verbs that allow a wide range of meanings:
* hanasu = to speak * hanaseru = to be able to speak * hanasereba = if (someone) speaks * hanasareru = was spoken * hanasaseru = makes (someone) speak/ let's (someone) speak * hanasasareru = (someone) was made or allowed to speak
11) only four verb conjugations for past or non-past. There is no "future" tense - at least not marked in the conjugation, and verbs need not agree with their subjects, as they must in English
* aruku = walks * aruita = walked * arukanai = doesn't walk * arukanakatta = didn't walk
12) There are two kinds of adjectives in Japanese: i-adjectives, and na-adjectives.
i-adjectives act as if there is a built-in "to be" at the end and conjugate much like verbs:
* kawaii = is cute (litereally, kawai-i = cute-is) * kawaikatta = was cute (kawai-katta = cute-was) * kawaikunai = isn't cute (literally kawai-ku na-i = cute-ly not-is) * kawaikunakatta = wasn't cute (kawai-ku na-katta = cute-ly not-was)
Kawaii neko = cute cat
Because of this, i-adjectives do not need a verb "to be" at the end of the sentence to follow them - it's already there.
na-ajectives, on the other hand, are basically nouns (and are used as such as well) that are linked to nouns they describe using "-na":
zankoku na neko = cruel cat
because they're essentially nouns, they do not conjugate, but the na becomes "da" - to be - at the end of the sentence, and "da" then conjugates as it normally does:
* zankoku da = is cruel (cruel is) * zankoku datta = was cruel (cruel was) * zankoku ja nai = isn't cruel (cruel not-is) * zankoku ja nakatta = wasn't cruel (cruel not-was)
13) You can tack entire sentences onto a noun to modify it like a giant adjective - We do this in English too, but we do it using a relative pronoun:
English - The cat, which ate the bird, is now sleeping. Japanese - tori o tabeta neko wa ima nette iru.
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Posted: Sun Sep 18, 2005 8:18 pm
there are 2 types of Japanese Hiragana and gadagana
They both have a i u e o ga gi gu ge go sa shi su se so ta chi tsu te to na ni nu ne no ha hi hu*fu* he ho ma mi mu me mo ya i yu e yo ra ri ru re ro wa i u e o n
sorry...my typer can't show u japanese..
here r some more..These all have two dots on them: ga gi gu ge go za ji zu ze zo da ji zu de do ba bi bu be bo
With one circle one them: pa pi pu pe po.
Good luck learning Japanese I'll post more up later..
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Posted: Mon Jun 26, 2006 6:27 pm
Actually, there are four types of writing Japanese. There is Katakana, Hiragana, Kanji and Romaji. 1. Romaji is when you write words with english letters.2. Katakana is used when someone does not know the kanji or in ads in magazines, street signs, etc. (I can't give an example.) 3. Hiragana is sometimes referred to as the cursive version to Japanese writing. It is also used when someone does not know the kanji to a word. The name Kagome is made out of hiragana. If it was out of katakana it would mean woven-bamboo pattern. This is because when you don't know the kanji for a word and it's the title for a song it is more appropriate to use hiragana. That means that Kagome's name is from the song Kagome.(I can't give an example.) 4. Kanji is the main format for writing Japanese. It is used for every single word unless there is no kanji to it.
Here's a list of words I can think of: konnichiwa good afternoon ohayo (gozaimasu) good morning kurisumasu supiritto merry christmas yoi otoshi o happy new years onegai please arigatou thank you kore wa nan desu ka What is it? shikata ga nai It can't be helped. hoshi star houshi monk inu dog tomare stop shinjitsu truth/true uta song tanuki racoon dog kitsune fox kitsune-bi fox fire fukai deep mori forest kokoro soul/heart/spirit aishiteru I love you. (romantic) ai love watashi me/myself/I doumo thanks jidai era sengoku feudal doki time to time baka stupid/idiot/etc. aho retard (usually to a boy) moshi moshi hello (when on the phone) ara huh? oro huh? (adaption of ara) kya ahh (add as many As or Hs as you'd like. xd ) nani what gomen nasai forgive me gomen sorry miko priestess bouzo priest (more of an insult) busu ugly girl (very rude insult) imouto little sister ane big sister uwa ahh (same as kya) demo but hai yes iie no neko cat youkai demon hanyou half-demon yuki-onna snow woman sakura cherry blossom(s) kaze wind sumomo peach osuwari sit hentai strange person (usually a pervert) are (over) there ja ne see you (later) midori green ichigo strawberry kotoba word(s) nezumi rat aoi blue ichi one ni two san four seikou success sango coral suishou crystal akago baby kohaku amber/topaz jun silver tenshi angel
Honorifics
Honorifics are used after a name to show your connection to that person or who you feel about them.
-san Mr., Ms., Mrs., showing politeness -chan used for little boys, pets, showing endearment towards a girl, and even lovers. Shows childesh cuteness. -sama One level above san, shows great respect. -dono Comes from 'tono' or lord, shows utmost respect. -kun Usually used for a boy to show endearment or familiarity, someone younger or of a lower station, also used between men as friends. [blank] This is usually left out in definitions but when you do not put a honorific after a name it shows you are intimate with that person. Be it family, spouse, or very close friends. But if it is not earned it can also be a great insult.
There are also titles for people depending on their stature.
sempai upper classmen or senior kohai opposite of sempai bozu equivalent to kid or squirt senseiliterally means 'one who has come before'. Usually a teacher, doctor, or a master of any profession or art.
You're lucky I put this here. I barely do this. ninja
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Posted: Thu Jul 20, 2006 10:21 pm
THE JAPANESE WRITING SYSTEM: There are four writing sytems in the Japanese language. They are Katakana, Hiragana, Kanji, and Romaji. Note this, Japanese is usually written from right-to-left and up-and-down (that is Japanese is not written across the page, but down the page).
1. Katakana (片仮名): General katakana looks like this: フ, リ, ー. Most of the characters in the katakana chart look stiff and geometric. Katakana is generally used to pronounce or spell out words that are not Japanese. (i.e. Smith would not be pronounced or spelled the same way. It is pronounced as Su-mi-su and spelled スミス in katakana only. Another example would be Chosun, the name of a non-Japanese kindom. In Japanese it is pronounced Cho-su-nu and spelled チョスヌ. It also can be spelled in Kanji.)
2. Hiragana (平仮名): This form of writing comes from words that do not exist in Kanji (aka the Chinese Characters). Suffixes such as -san (さん) and -kun (くん), and participles such as no (の), wa (は), and nomi (ので) are all written in hiragana. These words are generally placed in between kanji in order to connect them so the sentence flows freely. EXAMPLE: 太陽 が 東 の 空 に 昇 る。(taiyou ga higashi no sora ni noboru - the sun rises in the eastern sky). All the characters that have been bolded are HIRAGANA and the characters that are not are Kanji, which leads to the next one.
3. Kanji (漢字): Kanji originates directly from the traditional Chinese Characters, that is the characters that were once used before Mao came along and simplified many of the characters. There are tens and thousands of these characters, which is what makes it extremely hard to learn. The typical Japanese student learns about 2000 characters by the time she/he finishes Junior High. Those 2000 characters are standard in newspapers, books, magazines, textbooks, and street signs. Examples of Kanji would be Nihon (Japan), which is spelled 日本. The character (日) means "sun" and (本) meas "to originate". Now you know why Japan is called the "Land of the Rising Sun"... though technically it would be read "The Land where the Sun Originates".
4. Romaji (ローマ字): This is the most frequently used writing style here on Gaia. Words such as Nihon, baka, kitsune, yama, shikigami, and so on are what we call Romaji. Basically, Romaji is the "romanization" of Japanese words. In short, it is Japanese spelled with the English alphabet.
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Posted: Sun Aug 27, 2006 12:48 pm
Names in English
Inu-Yasha: Dog Demon
Kagome: Woven Bamboo
Kikyo: Hell Flower
Shippo: Seven Treasures
Sango: Coral
Miroku: Buddha of the Future
Kaede: Maple Tree
Sesshoumaru: Killing Perfection
Naraku: Hell
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