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· Ayu's Official Site · Ayu's twitter · Ayu's YouTube · masa's translations · Misa-chan's translations · |
#1
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Ayu in Katakana
Does anyone know how to spell Ayu's name in Katakana? I think it's A-Yu-Mi Ha-Ma-Sa-Ki but I'm not sure. If you could, just type it out in Romanji.
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I let it bang, bang. |
#2
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hai its...
a-yu-mi ha-ma-sa-ki the attachment is what it looks like in katakana |
#3
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wuts katakana?
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![]() THANX naru!!!!!!! -- lizziemeister ;] |
#4
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i think it's another way of writing for the Japanese. Like kanji and hiragana
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#5
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o, ok- thx!
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![]() THANX naru!!!!!!! -- lizziemeister ;] |
#6
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Katakana is used when a Japanese person wants to spell anything thats normally writen in English..for example peoples names, alot of signs you'll see in Japan are writen in Katakana because they are English words.
Katakana and Hiragana have all the same sounds cept they are all drawn differently (of course). I hope that helps a little bit more! ^_^
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*Yawns* |
#7
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hiragana: http://www.geocities.com/fsdrl//hiragana.html
katakana: http://www.geocities.com/fsdrl//katakana.html just a small example of kanji: http://www.geocities.com/fsdrl//kanjifirst.html hiragana and katakana are the simple part of the the japanese language [writing wise], kanji [the part simlliar w/ chinese writing], is the more complex writing ^^ |
#8
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AYE. I DONT GET KANJI. thers al ike different symbol for every word? no pattern?!
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#9
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Quote:
![]() Quote:
Quote:
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A Song for XY Last edited by appears; 5th August 2003 at 10:18 PM. |
#10
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This is becoming too technical but if you desperately want to understand how kanji developed, first there are simple looking kanji for things like fire, water, sky, one two three, and they actually resembled what they are supposed to mean. Water is somewhat like this |||. The lines are actually curvy and looks like a river. From these simple kanji came more complex kanji which represents abstract ideas or 'difficult-to-draw' objects. Example: water + eye = tears, woman + kindness = mother, wood + wood + wood = forest etc. There are other ways kanji are formed but I guess I'll stop here.
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#11
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yup, like birds in a tree expresses ~to assemble / gather~ and lose/die over heart/mind = to forget...
impressive how they found pictures to represent everything
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A Song for XY |
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