| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | California | |
| age | 23 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year |
| seen | May 9 at 17:07 | |
| stats | profile views | 110 |
I'm interested in Japan, and I hope that I can move there someday.
I found out that I passed N2! Now studying N1 material~
|
Dec 5 |
comment |
The meaning of kakemawaru 駆け回る Not at all :) I just thought it was interesting since you told me the word I was looking for. |
|
Dec 5 |
comment |
The meaning of kakemawaru 駆け回る It looks like this answer could also be the answer to a very similar question a long time ago. japanese.stackexchange.com/q/5902/1328 |
|
Dec 4 |
comment |
I have no idea what this is saying. Can you have two topics in a sentence? The lack of strict rules for 読点 make it rather difficult for foreigners to understand at times. Thanks for clearing this up. |
|
Nov 25 |
comment |
Where does「えっと」come from? @Dono Is that an answer? What do you mean "general form"? What is it based on? |
|
Nov 7 |
comment |
Why does 「頭にきた」signify being mad at something? @Flaw: Yes that's true. However, that phrase isn't necessarily associated with being "irritated". I thought it was used in the context of someone being prideful and telling them to be more humble. |
|
Oct 21 |
comment |
Why can 髪の毛 only refer to hair on your head? @TsuyoshiIto: I don't see your point. Apparently, this is a concept that is so obvious there shouldn't be any questions asked about it? |
|
Oct 21 |
comment |
Why can 髪の毛 only refer to hair on your head? This makes more sense. I was told that if it's not 髪の毛, then it would just be called 毛. But if you're saying that it's actually 腕の毛 etc., then I can understand. |
|
Oct 3 |
comment |
How do Japanese pronounce microseconds (μ秒)? @Teno: It looks like 秒 is the only one that is not a loanword from the looks of that page. |
|
Oct 3 |
comment |
What does 金 have in common with triggers/guns? Thinking 金 represented money was a silly mistake of mine. Thanks! |
|
Oct 3 |
comment |
Is there any difference between 大の好物 and 大好物? @Teno: Thank you! Do you think it depends on which word/phrase is more common? Is 大の親友 used equally as much as 大親友? |
|
Oct 1 |
comment |
Is being called an オタク derogatory? @user1205935 Oh I see. Well, I suppose it depends on the context. My presumption of it was exactly like the definition Teno posted. Which at first glance looks like a good thing, but there seems to be more to it. |
|
Oct 1 |
comment |
Is being called an オタク derogatory? @user1205935 That is what I'm asking. I'm not Japanese, so I don't know how Japanese think about オタク. |
|
Oct 1 |
comment |
When is it appropriate to use お宅 to refer to the second-person? @phoenixheart6 In what way is being called an オタク derogatory? |
|
Oct 1 |
comment |
What does コミュニケーションがとれる mean? I don't understand how "a team where all members speak a lot to each others" is representative of having communication skills. Is it similar to "a team of members who communicate with each other well"? |
|
Sep 28 |
comment |
What does 不可とする mean? So then "disable" would be appropriate? |
|
Sep 27 |
comment |
How do I say “course duration” in Japanese? If each course is four years long, then there's a problem. Did you mean "all engineering disciplines"? |
|
Sep 26 |
comment |
神様がある vs. 神様がいる I wonder if this is related: japanese.stackexchange.com/q/6474/1328 |
|
Sep 20 |
comment |
Why does 「やきもち」 mean to be jealous? An explanation for the down vote would be nice. |
|
Sep 6 |
comment |
Why does 「やきもち」 mean to be jealous? Thanks! the information about 妬く was also interesting! |
|
Aug 29 |
comment |
How would you say “talking shop” in Japanese? @Tim Interesting. I asked some other people if they had heard of it, but none had. Is it old? |