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Introducing Japanese Things

Name: Anonymous 2005-12-10 8:54

Please introduce Japanese customs, food and people.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-12 9:19

>>160
I have seen it in manga. When sitting at a kotatsu a girl has a great opportunity to rub a boys penis with her feet.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-12 13:16

Why do Japanese sentences translated to English always sound the same?  Like most of the replies in this thread, they have a sort of informative politeness that doesn't change style or tone at all.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-13 9:35 (sage)

It's been said that Japanese people are too polite. They often bow each other. But it's true for only middle-aged or old people. The young Japanese are very rude. They don't know moral or politeness. If you teach English in a low level high school in Japan, you can understand this very easily. They never respect teachers. They chat and chat ignoring their teacher. They are much worse than real animals.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-14 19:08

do you have any nigers in Japan?

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-15 5:58

There are a few black people in Japan.
In the past they were not so popular.
But now many Japanese girls, especially girls in big cities
like black people.
They think it's cool to walk with black people.
Japanese girls are so foolish that they are greatly infuenced by mass media.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-15 9:06

Warn your girls that negroes all have STD's and are violent drug users.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-15 16:19

>Warn your negroes that jp girls all have STD's
fixed

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-15 18:37

>>163

I mean there's a tone in these sentences that sounds polite or formal, like each word is spoken without slang, dialect or contractions.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-15 20:45

>>161
My favorite fetish! But I think I only like it in anime, not real life.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-15 23:54

probably because Japanese people learn English purely according to grammatical rules, as opposed to immersion, so I bet they never pick up on the slang and dialect you'd get from interacting in everyday life.

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-16 8:07

>>168 You can use any slang expressions you love. But so what?

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-16 12:53

>>168 still giggles when he writes "shit"

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-17 8:33 (sage)

"Giri" and "ninjoh" are very hard to translate into English. "Giri" is a kind of duty, which we should follow. Even if we hate to do it, we are often forced to do it out of the sense of "giri" to make our society stable and peaceful. Almost all Japanese send New Year's cards to their boss or colleagues on New Year's Day even it they think it's troublsome. "Ninjoh" is natural human feelings. The person with "ninjoh" feels very sorry for people who are in trouble, and try to help him. In English, compassionate feelings are the most similar to "ninjoh".   

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-19 15:46

What are the four levels of rape in Japanese society and which ones are ok?

Name: Anonymous 2006-01-19 18:48 (sage)

>>174
I guess they are the same ones your parents practised on you, except the last three aren't ok in Japan.

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-08 1:25

>>1-177
same person, lol it was me all the fucking time.

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-08 1:25

wtf? where is 176?

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-08 1:27

I ate it

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-08 1:58

>>178

THE NUMBER 176 DOES NOT EXIST

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-08 2:00

>>180
Its n unlucky number in japanese culture

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-08 2:01

>>181

0/0 = 176

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-08 3:44

>>183
I'm taking a shit into your post -- huuuuuh pffarplfshhhhh farP! splash

Name: Anonymous 2011-06-08 19:29

Name: Sgt.Kabuᩱ텯kiman짬蟊 2012-05-26 6:59

All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy

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