Why does that dude have 死 (shi) which is "death" on his neck? Like huh?
The other looks like 父(chichi) which is "father".
"Father Death?"
I got distracted by this too much.
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
+1
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ChanusHarbinger of the Spicy Rooster ApocalypseThe Flames of a Thousand Collapsed StarsRegistered Userregular
Why does that dude have 死 (shi) which is "death" on his neck? Like huh?
The other looks like 父(chichi) which is "father".
"Father Death?"
I got distracted by this too much.
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
would make sense
can you imagine how your chinese father would react if you told him you wanted to play guitar for a living
Allegedly a voice of reason.
+1
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cptruggedI think it has something to do with free will.Registered Userregular
Why does that dude have 死 (shi) which is "death" on his neck? Like huh?
The other looks like 父(chichi) which is "father".
"Father Death?"
I got distracted by this too much.
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
I always remember my teachers in Japan asking me, "Why do all these basketball players have all these tattoos with fake Chinese characters or with complete nonsense?"
I thought about typing in "Don't ever use Google Translate for tattoos, guys" into Google Translate and translating it into Japanese, but I think I would've just give Mazzyx an aneurysm.
Switch Friend Code: SW-3011-6091-2364
+8
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TL DRNot at all confident in his reflexive opinions of thingsRegistered Userregular
Why does that dude have 死 (shi) which is "death" on his neck? Like huh?
The other looks like 父(chichi) which is "father".
"Father Death?"
I got distracted by this too much.
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
I was listening to a podcast this morning in which an author was cautioning against breaking down Japanese words into their component parts. He used the analogy "Carpet, if broken down this way, could be taken to mean a pet car or a pet that lives in your car."
+3
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mysticjuicer[he/him] I'm a muscle wizardand I cast P U N C HRegistered Userregular
Why does that dude have 死 (shi) which is "death" on his neck? Like huh?
The other looks like 父(chichi) which is "father".
"Father Death?"
I got distracted by this too much.
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
I was listening to a podcast this morning in which an author was cautioning against breaking down Japanese words into their component parts. He used the analogy "Carpet, if broken down this way, could be taken to mean a pet car or a pet that lives in your car."
Most combination have a rather logical connection so it makes sense.
Then you have 料理 which is cuisine. The first part has to do with food.
But that last one? The ri? It is Confucian justice basically. On its own it has nothing to do with food.
Why does that dude have 死 (shi) which is "death" on his neck? Like huh?
The other looks like 父(chichi) which is "father".
"Father Death?"
I got distracted by this too much.
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
I always remember my teachers in Japan asking me, "Why do all these basketball players have all these tattoos with fake Chinese characters or with complete nonsense?"
I really had no good response to it.
As that got bigger in the late 90s. The university anime club I founded decided to do something silly. We had club t-shirts made. Long sleeve ones. And we decided to get "cool" kanji going down the left sleeve. But secretly the officers had decided the kanji would read essentially "Chicken Fried Rice". Luckily the club members thought it was hilarious as we were kind of poking fun of the whole "cool kanji" thing.
Lets just say that the international students and the TAs in the Japanese department all had a good laugh.
Why does that dude have 死 (shi) which is "death" on his neck? Like huh?
The other looks like 父(chichi) which is "father".
"Father Death?"
I got distracted by this too much.
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
I was listening to a podcast this morning in which an author was cautioning against breaking down Japanese words into their component parts. He used the analogy "Carpet, if broken down this way, could be taken to mean a pet car or a pet that lives in your car."
Most combination have a rather logical connection so it makes sense.
Then you have 料理 which is cuisine. The first part has to do with food.
But that last one? The ri? It is Confucian justice basically. On its own it has nothing to do with food.
Dumb idea: cuisine is when you do justice to the ingredients?
Why does that dude have 死 (shi) which is "death" on his neck? Like huh?
The other looks like 父(chichi) which is "father".
"Father Death?"
I got distracted by this too much.
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
I was listening to a podcast this morning in which an author was cautioning against breaking down Japanese words into their component parts. He used the analogy "Carpet, if broken down this way, could be taken to mean a pet car or a pet that lives in your car."
Most combination have a rather logical connection so it makes sense.
Then you have 料理 which is cuisine. The first part has to do with food.
But that last one? The ri? It is Confucian justice basically. On its own it has nothing to do with food.
Dumb idea: cuisine is when you do justice to the ingredients?
I think if you want to take it that way it would be ingredients in their right place.
In reality the Japanese have a lot of combinations that are not about meaning but about sounds especially if they are moving a native word to a borrowed Japanese writing. There are all sorts of historical things that go into this.
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I ate a huge burrito.
My gut is not pleased with my life choices.
is this about his random ass dippin dots tweets
maybe i'm streaming terrible dj right now if i am its here
maybe i'm streaming terrible dj right now if i am its here
attempt at japanese for darth vader
you are at least the earl of agrees tho
Maybe it's something different in Chinese. Like separately those are Father Death but put them together and it means Guitar. Chinese always seems weird like that to me.
maybe his dad died and he wanted to get a tribute tattoo but also did the thing where you get a tattoo in a language you don't speak
This is fucking fantastic
Margrave, imo, or perhaps Marquis. I am uncertain if [chat] qualifies as a Holy Empire, or just a regular old secular one.
would make sense
can you imagine how your chinese father would react if you told him you wanted to play guitar for a living
I'll take that.
I always remember my teachers in Japan asking me, "Why do all these basketball players have all these tattoos with fake Chinese characters or with complete nonsense?"
I really had no good response to it.
He's Uncle Death from Let it Die?
(See y'all later! )
I was listening to a podcast this morning in which an author was cautioning against breaking down Japanese words into their component parts. He used the analogy "Carpet, if broken down this way, could be taken to mean a pet car or a pet that lives in your car."
maybe he's a fan of the Hogfather?
they held a divorce party on sunday
someone wore a t-shirt that said "I TOLD YOU SO"
it was a good night
eh
Most combination have a rather logical connection so it makes sense.
Then you have 料理 which is cuisine. The first part has to do with food.
But that last one? The ri? It is Confucian justice basically. On its own it has nothing to do with food.
wait how do you know this
As that got bigger in the late 90s. The university anime club I founded decided to do something silly. We had club t-shirts made. Long sleeve ones. And we decided to get "cool" kanji going down the left sleeve. But secretly the officers had decided the kanji would read essentially "Chicken Fried Rice". Luckily the club members thought it was hilarious as we were kind of poking fun of the whole "cool kanji" thing.
Lets just say that the international students and the TAs in the Japanese department all had a good laugh.
psych nerd bet: he took an OCEAN or Big Five personality test
the "no true scotch man" fallacy.
probably agrees divided by posts
as an agreeee
You live in Denver.
A place with a large PA contingent. And armies of nerd bros.
I can point you to all sorts of stuff around there.
Currently DMing: None
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[5e] Dural Melairkyn - AC 18 | HP 40 | Melee +5/1d8+3 | Spell +4/DC 12
as the agreeest
the "no true scotch man" fallacy.
Dumb idea: cuisine is when you do justice to the ingredients?
I do not live in Denver. I live an hour, hour and a halfish away from Denver.
Rene RIP.
Choose Your Own Chat 1 Choose Your Own Chat 2 Choose Your Own Chat 3
I think if you want to take it that way it would be ingredients in their right place.
In reality the Japanese have a lot of combinations that are not about meaning but about sounds especially if they are moving a native word to a borrowed Japanese writing. There are all sorts of historical things that go into this.
But really it is a borrowed sound combo.
Dark Souls 3 Second DLC releases March 28th!
So, you know, you'll have three weeks to beat Zelda before it comes out.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezosSMzPdNQ
excuse me u aren't chanus
Where in CO do you live? Especially how you talk about rent I was thinking you would of been in Denver/Denver Metro.