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Charles wrote:Pencilslave wrote:" Biru o ippai motte kitte kudasai"![]()
I thought this means"Please bring me a bottle of beer."Pencilslave wrote: "Otoire wa..![]()
DJEB wrote:Toire wa doko... is correct.
Charles wrote: I seem to have gotten the impression that pencilslave is a man. Correct me if I'm wrong.
DJEB wrote:Toire wa doko... is correct.
Thanks DJEB.
Is there a quick and easy way to know when to add the O honorific?
Kana you can learn in no time flat. Just walk around with flash cards checking the cards in the time you spend walking around. By the end of the week, you'll have hiragana and katakana down.
For kanji, look at how the kanji is put together. There are radicals that make up the kanji (hen, tsukuri, kanmuri, ashi, tare, nyou, kamae) and often give a clue as to the reading. Knowing the radicals makes things easier.
Charles wrote:DJEB wrote:Toire wa doko... is correct.
But Otoire sounds rather effeminate coming from a man.
Point taken. Could have been worse though I s'pose. I could have asked
"Benjo wa doko desu ka" which I think is the equivalent of asking "Where's the shitter?"
I seem to have gotten the impression that pencilslave is a man.
Boku ga otoko desu.
"Biru o ippai motte kitte kudasai" sort of says "bring me as much beer as I can drink."
All the Japanese most gaijin college students and American military personell need to know.![]()
Less is more. You don't really need to ask the bartender to motte kitte, and if you're only ordering one beer, you can just say "biru kudasai."
Pencilslave wrote:DJEB wrote:Toire wa doko... is correct.
Thanks DJEB.
Is there a quick and easy way to know when to add the O honorific?
Kana you can learn in no time flat. Just walk around with flash cards checking the cards in the time you spend walking around. By the end of the week, you'll have hiragana and katakana down.
For kanji, look at how the kanji is put together. There are radicals that make up the kanji (hen, tsukuri, kanmuri, ashi, tare, nyou, kamae) and often give a clue as to the reading. Knowing the radicals makes things easier.
If I'm following you correctly, Radicals are similar structures in different kanji right?
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