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index startersguide - LearnJapanese - Reddit What is Japanese? Japanese is the national language of Japan and its people According to Ethnologue, Japanese is the 9th largest language in the world by number of speakers with 122 million speakers in 25 countries
What do the shapes - Japanese Language Stack Exchange 55 I am interested in Japanese culture and the symbolism used in Japan, specifically I'd like to know what the triangle, circle, ╳ cross and square mean to a Japanese person How are those shapes interpreted and do they vary depending on there being filled or not?
The many ways to say and in Japanese In English, we just have one word for the conjunction and which works just fine for many categories, but in Japanese, there are separate words: と joins nouns together in a closed list や joins nouns
Is the english xoxo related to japanese メロメロ So I stumbled over the Japanese word メロメロ (mero mero) wich is often translated as being in love I was wondering if it is related to the english xoxo (hugs and kisses) or is this just a coincidence?
Japanese え sound - [ɛ] or [e]? - Japanese Language Stack Exchange Japanese, a language which has 3-level vowel height system, does not have the distinction of e and ɛ Or speaking more correctly, Japanese え and お are (true) mid vowels, that their sweet spots fall just midway of theoretical [e] and [ɛ]
Is kanban (看板) really the same in Japanese and Chinese? Japanese: かんばん kanban [kʰɐmbɐɴ] (AmE approx come-bun (gh)) As you may know, 看板 is not a Chinese Chinese word, merely a transliteration of the Japanese word meaning "signboard", in the kanban system context (ironically, the word is rarely written in kanji in Japanese as for this specific sense) or anime words like 看板娘
How do you say the in japanese? That's the case in Japanese: the articles "the" and "a" do not exist In order for you to think about a sentence in those terms, you would have to deduce the article from context I found a little example here: Definiteness of Nouns In Japanese, the definiteness and plurality of a noun is implicit
Why is 二十歳 pronounced はたち? - Japanese Language Stack Exchange 二十歳 is a (to me) bizarre exception to the usual number+さい rule for discussing age Is this rooted in 20 being the Japanese age of majority? Added: To be more specific: why isn't it pronounced にじゅうさい
Question about supposedly a Japanese proverb I came across to this sentence: The Japanese say you have three faces The first face, you show to the world The second face, you show to your close friends, and your family The third face,