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| | Re: Any Japanese here?
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| Paul Davidson Yuki Sasaki <sasaki@arches.uga.edu> wrote in message news:FpsoBD.LnF@lugnet.com... (...) doko-no (...) the (...) Watashi-wa UNBC*-de benkyoo-wo shite-imasu. Hai, kanji-mo naraimasu. (...) Hai, wakaramisu. (but I need to buy a (...) (25 years ago, 12-Feb-00, to lugnet.loc.jp)
| | | | Re: Any Japanese here?
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| (...) Watashi-wa Joojia-Daigaku-de nihongo-wo oshiete-imasu. Pooru-san-wa doko-no daigaku-de benkyoo-wo shite-imasu-ka? (te-imasu roughly corresponds to the English 'be -ing') Daigaku-de kanji-mo naratte-imasu-ka? Watashi-no nihongo-ga (...) (25 years ago, 12-Feb-00, to lugnet.loc.jp)
| | | | Re: Fierce warrior names
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| (...) That's an interesting observation. I never thought the sound "mu" could make the words sound less powerful or strong. In the word "muteki", "mu" represents "void" or "nothingness", and it's a strong word/morpheme. But if this word sounds (...) (25 years ago, 12-Feb-00, to lugnet.loc.jp)
| | | | Re: Any Japanese here?
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| Paul Davidson (...) daigaku-de (...) omoshiroi-desu-yo! (...) Hai, tanoshii-desu. Doko-ni o-ashiemasu? (is that correct?) (...) langue (...) le (...) comprends (...) une (...) que (...) Merci beaucoup vos gentils mots. Le japonais, c'est une langue (...) (25 years ago, 11-Feb-00, to lugnet.loc.jp)
| | | | Re: Fierce warrior names
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| (...) Aha! OK! (...) I like it! BTW, does the softer sound of "mu" (as opposed to more plosive phonemes like ka or ga or zu) subtly imply that such a name might be somewhat insidious? -- that is, such that an attacker might not learn Muteki's true (...) (25 years ago, 10-Feb-00, to lugnet.loc.jp)
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