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far-east monkey (or any japanese)
 

offline Frag from New Jersey (United States) on 2002-07-01 07:24 [#00291380]
Points: 1024 Status: Lurker



Ok...in Katakana how the FUCK DO YOU TELL the difference
between Shi and Tu...they look almost identical and if they
were written quickly I wouldn't be able to tell...a lot of
them are like that, in hiragana and katakana...I'm trying to
learn them now, for the sake of boredom.


 

offline far-east monkey from psychiatry hospital in osaka on 2002-07-01 07:59 [#00291406]
Points: 1663 Status: Lurker



are you learing japanese for the sake of
boredom??
you have much time to do anything. don't you?
it's funny.
to be honest
i have no confidence to explain difference
between shi and tu .
plus my english is not enough. sorry.

for japanase shi and tu isn't obviously identical.
i know how you confusing.
for instance
how do you say moon in japanese.
you might say " tuki "
you shouldn't say " shiki'
Do you make a sense difference?

in my opinion
I think there is no other way to repeat
a sentence used "shi" and "tu".

may i ask for some question?
what do you say " know" in japanese?



 

offline far-east monkey from psychiatry hospital in osaka on 2002-07-01 08:01 [#00291407]
Points: 1663 Status: Lurker



oops!
you may be away....
sorry for replying lately..



 

offline far-east monkey from psychiatry hospital in osaka on 2002-07-01 08:13 [#00291419]
Points: 1663 Status: Lurker



and
Between hiragana and katakana is
same meaning.
both aren't identical on how to write.



 

offline Frag from New Jersey (United States) on 2002-07-02 12:15 [#00293266]
Points: 1024 Status: Lurker



Yeah I know but I just noticed that on some of them they are
really similiar and that someone with bad handwriting could
easily make one look like the other


 

offline uzim on 2002-07-02 17:15 [#00293534]
Points: 17716 Status: Lurker



the dots (not really dots but whatever) in tsu are
mostly aligned horizontally, where as in shi they are
vertically...

it's harder to tell between so and n, and
between large and small kanas sometimes...

katakana chart (for the curious ;))


 


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