[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Even vegetables, seriously, imagine trying to remember off the top of your head after at least five years ago of learning it what an Aubergine is called in your new tongue.[/quote]
Carrot = Ninjin
Garlic = Ninniku
Me, juxtaposing in a Japanese grocery store, after intensive “fruits & veggies” study:
Excuse me, where is the jinniku?
(Jinniku = human flesh)[/quote]
warding off vampires and hunting wabbits, I see
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Even vegetables, seriously, imagine trying to remember off the top of your head after at least five years ago of learning it what an Aubergine is called in your new tongue.[/quote]
Carrot = Ninjin
Garlic = Ninniku
Me, juxtaposing in a Japanese grocery store, after intensive “fruits & veggies” study:
Excuse me, where is the jinniku?
(Jinniku = human flesh)[/quote]
warding off vampires and hunting wabbits, I see[/quote]
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Even vegetables, seriously, imagine trying to remember off the top of your head after at least five years ago of learning it what an Aubergine is called in your new tongue.[/quote]
Carrot = Ninjin
Garlic = Ninniku
Me, juxtaposing in a Japanese grocery store, after intensive “fruits & veggies” study:
Excuse me, where is the jinniku?
(Jinniku = human flesh)[/quote]
warding off vampires and hunting wabbits, I see[/quote]
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Even vegetables, seriously, imagine trying to remember off the top of your head after at least five years ago of learning it what an Aubergine is called in your new tongue.[/quote]
Carrot = Ninjin
Garlic = Ninniku
Me, juxtaposing in a Japanese grocery store, after intensive “fruits & veggies” study:
Excuse me, where is the jinniku?
(Jinniku = human flesh)[/quote]
warding off vampires and hunting wabbits, I see[/quote]
W
Sicks[/quote]
you got it[/quote]
Vampires love garlic. We started that lil rumor so humans keep it with them…its like a burger sleeping with A1 sauce nect to it
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Even vegetables, seriously, imagine trying to remember off the top of your head after at least five years ago of learning it what an Aubergine is called in your new tongue.[/quote]
Carrot = Ninjin
Garlic = Ninniku
Me, juxtaposing in a Japanese grocery store, after intensive “fruits & veggies” study:
Excuse me, where is the jinniku?
(Jinniku = human flesh)[/quote]
warding off vampires and hunting wabbits, I see[/quote]
W
Sicks[/quote]
you got it[/quote]
Vampires love garlic. We started that lil rumor so humans keep it with them…its like a burger sleeping with A1 sauce nect to it[/quote]
Oh yeah. You have stated that before. I could’ve died out there.
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Even vegetables, seriously, imagine trying to remember off the top of your head after at least five years ago of learning it what an Aubergine is called in your new tongue.[/quote]
Carrot = Ninjin
Garlic = Ninniku
Me, juxtaposing in a Japanese grocery store, after intensive “fruits & veggies” study:
Excuse me, where is the jinniku?
(Jinniku = human flesh)[/quote]
warding off vampires and hunting wabbits, I see[/quote]
W
Sicks[/quote]
you got it[/quote]
Vampires love garlic. We started that lil rumor so humans keep it with them…its like a burger sleeping with A1 sauce nect to it[/quote]
Oh yeah. You have stated that before. I could’ve died out there.[/quote]
Hmmm, I did question for a second if this was really count choc, all the posting without Arab pussy being injected and all. But this has me convinced.
[quote]flipcollar wrote:
it’s these fucking idiots with 50 posts jumping in saying how ‘obvious’ it is that DN and Rock are the same, after they’ve been on this site for 2 weeks. It’s maddening.[/quote]
Most of these posters while likely be posting behind an alias as they are too shitbag to let their feeling be known under their main account.
[quote]flipcollar wrote:
it’s these fucking idiots with 50 posts jumping in saying how ‘obvious’ it is that DN and Rock are the same, after they’ve been on this site for 2 weeks. It’s maddening.[/quote]
Most of these posters while likely be posting behind an alias as they are too shitbag to let their feeling be known under their main account.
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Even vegetables, seriously, imagine trying to remember off the top of your head after at least five years ago of learning it what an Aubergine is called in your new tongue.[/quote]
Carrot = Ninjin
Garlic = Ninniku
Me, juxtaposing in a Japanese grocery store, after intensive “fruits & veggies” study:
Excuse me, where is the jinniku?
(Jinniku = human flesh)[/quote]
warding off vampires and hunting wabbits, I see[/quote]
W
Sicks[/quote]
you got it[/quote]
Vampires love garlic. We started that lil rumor so humans keep it with them…its like a burger sleeping with A1 sauce nect to it[/quote]
Oh yeah. You have stated that before. I could’ve died out there.[/quote]
Hmmm, I did question for a second if this was really count choc, all the posting without Arab pussy being injected and all. But this has me convinced.[/quote]
I have a bad Iraqi chick who lives next door to me. Shes used to bombs going off and shit so she fucks with so much intensity…
American girls are terrible at sex. Them war zone bitches tho…
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Isn’t the Japanese alphabet set out in such a way where the ending to any particular syllable differs on the change of a vowel to an alternate vowel?
[/quote]
What?
Is English your first language?[/quote]
English is my second language, Japanese is my first.
(But seriously, isn’t it all split up into like no/ni/ne/nu/na/no and so forth with other consonant beginnings? I’m sure I heard somewhere that it was the case.)
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Isn’t the Japanese alphabet set out in such a way where the ending to any particular syllable differs on the change of a vowel to an alternate vowel?
[/quote]
What?
Is English your first language?[/quote]
English is my second language, Japanese is my first.
(But seriously, isn’t it all split up into like no/ni/ne/nu/na/no and so forth with other consonant beginnings? I’m sure I heard somewhere that it was the case.)[/quote]
Yeah, that’s true.[/quote]
My vocabulary gets convoluted sometimes, I meant that wherein a syllable likely encompasses a consonant and then a vowel (with the exception of “n”), that the change of said vowels (or consonants I guess) would lead to a different word. Ni-n-ni-ku to Ji-n-ni-ku? Where the Ni- prefix changes to a Ji-?
This is why I don’t learn Japanese Chush, my brain can’t handle it as easily as it should.
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Isn’t the Japanese alphabet set out in such a way where the ending to any particular syllable differs on the change of a vowel to an alternate vowel?
[/quote]
What?
Is English your first language?[/quote]
English is my second language, Japanese is my first.
(But seriously, isn’t it all split up into like no/ni/ne/nu/na/no and so forth with other consonant beginnings? I’m sure I heard somewhere that it was the case.)[/quote]
Yeah, that’s true.[/quote]
My vocabulary gets convoluted sometimes, I meant that wherein a syllable likely encompasses a consonant and then a vowel (with the exception of “n”), that the change of said vowels (or consonants I guess) would lead to a different word. Ni-n-ni-ku to Ji-n-ni-ku? Where the Ni- prefix changes to a Ji-?
This is why I don’t learn Japanese Chush, my brain can’t handle it as easily as it should.[/quote]
Finally understand what you meant.
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Isn’t the Japanese alphabet set out in such a way where the ending to any particular syllable differs on the change of a vowel to an alternate vowel?
[/quote]
What?
Is English your first language?[/quote]
English is my second language, Japanese is my first.
(But seriously, isn’t it all split up into like no/ni/ne/nu/na/no and so forth with other consonant beginnings? I’m sure I heard somewhere that it was the case.)[/quote]
Yeah, that’s true.[/quote]
My vocabulary gets convoluted sometimes, I meant that wherein a syllable likely encompasses a consonant and then a vowel (with the exception of “n”), that the change of said vowels (or consonants I guess) would lead to a different word. Ni-n-ni-ku to Ji-n-ni-ku? Where the Ni- prefix changes to a Ji-?
This is why I don’t learn Japanese Chush, my brain can’t handle it as easily as it should.[/quote]
Finally understand what you meant.[/quote]
I’m glad for you, all I’ve gone and done is confused myself more. Can you explain my explanation to me?
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Isn’t the Japanese alphabet set out in such a way where the ending to any particular syllable differs on the change of a vowel to an alternate vowel?
[/quote]
What?
Is English your first language?[/quote]
English is my second language, Japanese is my first.
(But seriously, isn’t it all split up into like no/ni/ne/nu/na/no and so forth with other consonant beginnings? I’m sure I heard somewhere that it was the case.)[/quote]
Yeah, that’s true.[/quote]
My vocabulary gets convoluted sometimes, I meant that wherein a syllable likely encompasses a consonant and then a vowel (with the exception of “n”), that the change of said vowels (or consonants I guess) would lead to a different word. Ni-n-ni-ku to Ji-n-ni-ku? Where the Ni- prefix changes to a Ji-?
This is why I don’t learn Japanese Chush, my brain can’t handle it as easily as it should.[/quote]
Finally understand what you meant.[/quote]
I’m glad for you, all I’ve gone and done is confused myself more. Can you explain my explanation to me?[/quote]
You’re overanalyzing it. There’s no fundamental difference in what constitutes a syllable. The difference is the value of the syllable and its orientation.
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Isn’t the Japanese alphabet set out in such a way where the ending to any particular syllable differs on the change of a vowel to an alternate vowel?
[/quote]
What?
Is English your first language?[/quote]
English is my second language, Japanese is my first.
(But seriously, isn’t it all split up into like no/ni/ne/nu/na/no and so forth with other consonant beginnings? I’m sure I heard somewhere that it was the case.)[/quote]
Yeah, that’s true.[/quote]
My vocabulary gets convoluted sometimes, I meant that wherein a syllable likely encompasses a consonant and then a vowel (with the exception of “n”), that the change of said vowels (or consonants I guess) would lead to a different word. Ni-n-ni-ku to Ji-n-ni-ku? Where the Ni- prefix changes to a Ji-?
This is why I don’t learn Japanese Chush, my brain can’t handle it as easily as it should.[/quote]
Finally understand what you meant.[/quote]
I’m glad for you, all I’ve gone and done is confused myself more. Can you explain my explanation to me?[/quote]
You’re overanalyzing it. There’s no fundamental difference in what constitutes a syllable. The difference is the value of the syllable and its orientation.[/quote]
[quote]Big Kahuna wrote:
Isn’t the Japanese alphabet set out in such a way where the ending to any particular syllable differs on the change of a vowel to an alternate vowel?
[/quote]
What?
Is English your first language?[/quote]
English is my second language, Japanese is my first.
(But seriously, isn’t it all split up into like no/ni/ne/nu/na/no and so forth with other consonant beginnings? I’m sure I heard somewhere that it was the case.)[/quote]
Yeah, that’s true.[/quote]
My vocabulary gets convoluted sometimes, I meant that wherein a syllable likely encompasses a consonant and then a vowel (with the exception of “n”), that the change of said vowels (or consonants I guess) would lead to a different word. Ni-n-ni-ku to Ji-n-ni-ku? Where the Ni- prefix changes to a Ji-?
This is why I don’t learn Japanese Chush, my brain can’t handle it as easily as it should.[/quote]
Finally understand what you meant.[/quote]
I’m glad for you, all I’ve gone and done is confused myself more. Can you explain my explanation to me?[/quote]
You’re overanalyzing it. There’s no fundamental difference in what constitutes a syllable. The difference is the value of the syllable and its orientation.[/quote]
…Gonna go back to French for now.[/quote]
Lol French is the probably the easiest language I’ve been introduced to.