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ADINSX posted:I'm actually a little surprised this hasn't happened already. Terrorists must surely know about these super cheap drones. 9/11 was an anomaly. modern terrorists don't bring you the bomb, they let you bring yourself to it
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# ? Feb 13, 2015 23:45 |
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# ? May 22, 2024 14:27 |
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Jonny 290 posted:9/11 was an anomaly. modern terrorists don't bring you the bomb, they let you set yourself up the bomb
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# ? Feb 13, 2015 23:52 |
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you'll regret this Luigi
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# ? Feb 13, 2015 23:56 |
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tbf people saying sir outside of teachers/british empire is weird as gently caress. I remember being in Korea and a huge army dude and his family stoping me and asking for directions. I knew where to send him but every sentence was finished with Yes Sir. Thank you Sir. So left after the lights Sir? and it weirded me the gently caress out because I was some slightly drunk scrawny british kid and he was this obviously high ranking mid thirties military guy stood next to his wife and kids and he was still talking to me like this, as if it was programmed into him and now he couldn't speak in any other way.
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:01 |
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vodkat posted:tbf people saying sir outside of teachers/british empire is weird as gently caress. I sir people all the fuckin' time, though ma'am is rare. (it's because ma'am = old lady in the south)
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:05 |
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I remember in Japanese you're supposed to conjugate verbs on relative social standing but I guess only olds care about the highest respect levels these days and young people aren't taught it anymore
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:10 |
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richard feynman has some anecdote about learning japanese and (the way he describes it) finding that there's no way to call someone else's house ugly or yours pretty. you invite someone over, "please grace my hovel with your presence." you go to someone else's house, "you do me a great honor by accepting me into your palace" ofc dick feynman was even more racist and sexist and outspoken than i am so who knows if this is true.
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:13 |
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poo poo and gas keep sliding out of my distended rear end in a top hat
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:15 |
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Sagebrush posted:richard feynman has some anecdote about learning japanese and (the way he describes it) finding that there's no way to call someone else's house ugly or yours pretty. you invite someone over, "please grace my hovel with your presence." you go to someone else's house, "you do me a great honor by accepting me into your palace" i think the american japanese speakers i know would consider this some pretty run-of-the-mill orientalist bullshit
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:17 |
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Luigi Thirty posted:In Japanese you're supposed to conjugate verbs on relative social standing but I guess only olds care about the highest respect levels these days and young people aren't taught it anymore In korean you have to do it all the time and its nbd because you do it instead of all the other bullshit we do in english to sound polite. More like just saying what you want to say and whacking sir/mr/hi/bro/I live with you and don'r care/ on the end of every sentence which in someways is actually way easier and more efficient. But in that anecdote it was weird because the dude was US military and literally had no reason to be respectful to me other than I could give him some directions,. Really he should have been pointing at me and saying 'kids thats why you need to get good grades' yet he still called me sir in the most differential of ways, and it weird me the gently caress out. idk maybe its just because I'm british and therefore have superpower like abilities to pick up on any formality or class difference but it was just something that really seemed odd and out of place to me.
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:17 |
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daft punk railroad posted:i think the american japanese speakers i know would consider this some pretty run-of-the-mill orientalist bullshit yeah it's not realy clear from his description whether it's "literally impossible to say it this way" (unlikely) or "it is incredibly insulting to use the language that way" (much more likely, esp. given he was writing in the 80s about experiences he had in the 60s and 70s)
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:20 |
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vodkat posted:In korean you have to do it all the time and its nbd because you do it instead of all the other bullshit we do in english to sound polite. More like just saying what you want to say and whacking sir/mr/hi/bro/I live with you and don'r care/ on the end of every sentence which in someways is actually way easier and more efficient. But in that anecdote it was weird because the dude was US military and literally had no reason to be respectful to me other than I could give him some directions,. Really he should have been pointing at me and saying 'kids thats why you need to get good grades' yet he still called me sir in the most differential of ways, and it weird me the gently caress out. idk maybe its just because I'm british and therefore have superpower like abilities to pick up on any formality or class difference but it was just something that really seemed odd and out of place to me. solly about your low self esteem i guess
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:20 |
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Sagebrush posted:who knows if this is true. I do it isn't
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:24 |
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british people have discrimination superpowers that's how they can hold lifelong opinions about literally everyone in the next town over that result in occasional football riots
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:25 |
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Sagebrush posted:richard feynman has some anecdote about learning japanese and (the way he describes it) finding that there's no way to call someone else's house ugly or yours pretty. you invite someone over, "please grace my hovel with your presence." you go to someone else's house, "you do me a great honor by accepting me into your palace" i.e. kind of true in a super literal way but not really true in a real way
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:26 |
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qirex posted:british people have discrimination superpowers that's how they can hold lifelong opinions about literally everyone in the next town over that result in occasional football riots lol @ the idea of brits playing football.
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:27 |
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Mad Wack posted:solly about your low self esteem i guess more like i was stumbling out of a bar near the red light district at mid day, half drunk, after having been out partying for the past 18 hours, smoking, hanging onto half a bottle of soju and looking like a wannabe punk circa 1978. I was having a great time, but I wouldn't even give myself any respect under those conditions.
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:27 |
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Shaggar posted:lol @ the idea of brits playing football. loving shaggared
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:28 |
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doesn't japanese use chinese counting words for plurals?
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:29 |
vodkat posted:In korean you have to do it all the time and its nbd because you do it instead of all the other bullshit we do in english to sound polite. More like just saying what you want to say and whacking sir/mr/hi/bro/I live with you and don'r care/ on the end of every sentence which in someways is actually way easier and more efficient. But in that anecdote it was weird because the dude was US military and literally had no reason to be respectful to me other than I could give him some directions,. Really he should have been pointing at me and saying 'kids thats why you need to get good grades' yet he still called me sir in the most differential of ways, and it weird me the gently caress out. idk maybe its just because I'm british and therefore have superpower like abilities to pick up on any formality or class difference but it was just something that really seemed odd and out of place to me. not sure how much it varies by branch and unit but some us military folks deeply believe in the concept of civilian control of the military. yeah it is exercised via the president but I've heard from a couple that civilians should be considered as though they are of superior rank. or their could be an organized effort to bullshit civilians when they ask about it.
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:29 |
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no recovery from that boys. we should just let go of the most popular sport in the world.
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:29 |
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Luigi Thirty posted:doesn't japanese use chinese counting words for plurals? japanese
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:31 |
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vodkat posted:no recovery from that boys. we should just let go of the most popular sport in the world. just call it "handegg" for instant moral victory
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:36 |
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qirex posted:just call it "handegg" for instant moral victory body armour rugby
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:39 |
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Luigi Thirty posted:doesn't japanese use chinese counting words for plurals? no Sagebrush posted:japanese actually mostly from the Koreans, who in turn had copied it from the Chinese but really that's not much different from us having ripped most things off from the French who got them from the Romans who got them from the Greeks who got them from the Phoenicians who got them from the Babylonians or some poo poo
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:42 |
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Soricidus posted:no linguistically it's pretty drat weird. it's very unusual to borrow the "bones" of a language from outside: grammatical features, counting words, family words e.g. english is riddled with french vocabulary, but our pronouns, grammar, etc are mostly derived from old english. with some very unusual inclusions from old norse. (conquest does funny things to a language...)
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:44 |
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"kanji" is literally just a japanese pronunciation of "hanzi", the chinese name for its own character set
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:44 |
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the nipponese are the only true sapient humans while all other races are mindless roughly person-shaped animals which only give the appearance of real thought
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:50 |
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Sagebrush posted:"kanji" is literally just a japanese pronunciation of "hanzi", the chinese name for its own character set you say this like it's somehow giving a unique insight into Japanese culture. where do you think the English word "letter" or "character" comes from?
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:52 |
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jesus spoke english read your bible sometime
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:54 |
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Soricidus posted:you say this like it's somehow giving a unique insight into Japanese culture. where do you think the English word "letter" or "character" comes from? it's an interesting fact because it's a loan-word (probably) formed from text instead of spoken language english doesn't have too many of those
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 00:58 |
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Thesoro posted:japanese has no future tense neither does english
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:17 |
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Soricidus posted:you say this like it's somehow giving a unique insight into Japanese culture. where do you think the English word "letter" or "character" comes from? 'roman alphabet' would have been a better example here (and 'alphabet' is what it is)
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:20 |
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Notorious b.s.d. posted:it's an interesting fact because it's a loan-word (probably) formed from text instead of spoken language i ... don't even understand what you're trying to say here. are you referring to the extremely dubious theory that the word "kanji"/"hanzi" was created in japan and subsequently adopted in china itself when they started to need to distinguish han zi from other types of zi? if so, there are plenty of examples in english of novel words formed by combining latin or greek morphemes. but in any case it's more likely that "kanji" is a straightforward loanword, with the differences in pronunciation easily explained by shifts in both chinese and japanese pronunciation in the 1200-odd years since it was borrowed. sorry but basically the japanese language is not particularly exceptional, it's a language like any other, it has some rare features but most languages have some rare features. all the popular narratives about how it's "unique" are pure orientalism. (and all the narratives about how it's unique in the amount it's borrowed from chinese are mostly yellow-peril racism building on the 1950s-1960s narrative of japan making cheap copies of everything, as though that's not how every rapidly-developing economy fuels itself)
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:27 |
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it is unique because the japanese people come from the sky and invented everything good about civilization before the Chinese and Koreans did goddammit
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:31 |
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ok maybe "hanzi" is a bad example word, but there are definitely loanwords in korean and japanese that are formed from local pronunciations of text, probably by people with little exposure to spoken chinese and that's pretty neat-o edit: to put it another way, the c-j-k languages have a nifty sorta faux-sprachbund that doesn't occur in very many places. lots of shared text in languages that are otherwise largely unrelated the only thing i can think of that is similar is the relationship between farsi and arabic in iran, or urdu and farsi in pakistan Notorious b.s.d. fucked around with this message at 01:39 on Feb 14, 2015 |
# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:32 |
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Luigi Thirty posted:it is unique because the japanese people come from the sky and invented everything good about civilization before the Chinese and Koreans did goddammit they graced every part of the world except nanjing
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:32 |
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computer parts posted:they graced every part of the world there's a Korean nationalist conspiracy theory that says Korea was the first to circle the globe because a bunch of names in a 13th century Korean atlas sound JUST LIKE the names of modern nation states
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:34 |
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Notorious b.s.d. posted:ok maybe "hanzi" is a bad example word, but there are definitely loanwords in korean and japanese that are formed from local pronunciations of text, probably by people with little exposure to spoken chinese how is this different from English words like "television"
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:38 |
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# ? May 22, 2024 14:27 |
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Soricidus posted:how is this different from English words like "television" the ancient greeks didn't actually have televisions
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# ? Feb 14, 2015 01:39 |