English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-09-01 20:13:47 · 7 answers · asked by o0lilazndemon0o 3 in Travel Asia Pacific Japan

Fun to say, fun to hear,

Just what you think I mean.

I'm flexible.

2007-09-02 16:44:34 · update #1

7 answers

\(^∇^)/LOTS of good answers already!
Hmmmmm, "fun words"...well, give these a try...
☆Masaka! *mah-saw-ka!
-Means along the lines of "Well, I never!", "You don't say?!"
☆Bikkuri! *bee-ku-ree!
-Means surprise, amazement, astonishment, open-eyed, thunderstruck...
☆Yatta! *yah-tah!
Means "Yes!", "Hooray!", "Yeah!"...
☆Mochikairi *moe-chi-keye-ree
Means take-out (food), to go...
~Those seem fun?
Well, today I heard a high school boy say;
"Gekikara!"(*^o^*) *geh-key-kah-rah
-It means "extremely hot (spicy)".
(↑I think! (^_-)-☆Someone correct me if I'm wrong, please!)
Have fun!♡^_^♡ 

2007-09-04 01:13:23 · answer #1 · answered by C 7 · 1 2

i used to be a huge anime fan, and am at present taking my fourth 3 hundred and sixty 5 days of school-point jap. i've got faith it may help, somewhat. Like reported previously, you will probable see lots of extraordinary words in anime which you does not use in real lifestyles (looking on what you watch), so as that's something to look out for. additionally, there are dissimilar characters who talk in techniques that are meant to be attractive or a laugh, and in case you talk that way in usual circumstances, you will frankly sound like an fool. in spite of the undeniable fact that. it may help lots with pronunciation, intonation, and issues like that. I additionally grew to become into able to %. up on some cultural info and factors that helped me understand Japan extra constructive. in case you're nevertheless watching anime once you study, i'd propose you initiate up listening extra for understanding; case in point, attempt to %. out words you recognize, and if a be conscious comes up lots which you do not understand, circulate look it up. Then attempt to observe the way they be conscious sentences -- that's significant because of the fact the be conscious order is so distinctive than English's. As you get extra constructive, you will desire to get extra useful, and probably you should start up watching anime devoid of the subtitles and notice how lots you recognize. You mightn't seize each and every thing, yet this manner of exposure would desire to up you study to seize extra. for my section, i've got reached a "hill" in my language study. the 1st 3 hundred and sixty 5 days of jap grew to become right into a breeze for me, i've got reached a point the place i've got have been given to artwork as problematic (or extra good) than anyone else. The past (anime) exposure helped on the beginning up, yet its result has somewhat dwindled. in short, in case you remember you're watching a comic strip, which isn't a one hundred% precise mirrored image of the language and subculture, it is going to help. quite considering the fact that anime is something which you probable delight in, it is going to motivate you and be a great supplement on your formal jap language study.

2016-12-16 09:09:08 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"kimoi" is a japanese slang lot of young people use. Its hard to explain what it means but its used when something is not right.......... like if someone is dressed wierd or someone does somthing strange they say "Aitsu Kimoi!" I'm half Okinawan and live in Japan so I know what I'm talking about.

2007-09-02 20:23:24 · answer #3 · answered by cali_musiq 2 · 1 2

Japanese slang

Maji De= oh really?

Hon Ma ni= is that so?

Nai Sho= Don't have

Ahh Cha= oh no!

Machatta= Got lost here

2007-09-01 20:46:24 · answer #4 · answered by Brian 3 · 1 3

Dekoboko. It means "bumpy." The kanji is awesome, too.
凸凹

2007-09-02 04:55:22 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Baka - use to call someone a fool or stupid

I don't really know what you mean by "fun words"



(*^-^*)

2007-09-02 09:12:00 · answer #6 · answered by kiki 4 · 0 3

gara gara - rattle
bochi bochi - so-so (Osaka dialect)
puri puri - jello-like texture/movement

2007-09-01 21:14:02 · answer #7 · answered by shazam 6 · 3 2

fedest.com, questions and answers