

*I know one is used for non japanese words. Dont know which one though.Holmes wrote:Ok first question that I always wanted to know: when do they use eihter one of the 3 forms of writing?

Holmes wrote:Ok first question that I always wanted to know: when do they use eihter one of the 3 forms of writing?

soratothamax wrote:Often times when -kun is used, in many mangas and anime, it's used by females, which I thought it meant because they were male, which showed respect, and it was mostly used by the younger crowd of females, like males use -chan toward women. But in XXXHolic it -kun was used by a dude....so does that mean he's teasing him? Shows some respect? Or what does it mean if a dude uses it?

soratothamax wrote:Often times when -kun is used, in many mangas and anime, it's used by females, which I thought it meant because they were male, which showed respect, and it was mostly used by the younger crowd of females, like males use -chan toward women. But in XXXHolic it -kun was used by a dude....so does that mean he's teasing him? Shows some respect? Or what does it mean if a dude uses it?

meidei wrote:soratothamax wrote:Often times when -kun is used, in many mangas and anime, it's used by females, which I thought it meant because they were male, which showed respect, and it was mostly used by the younger crowd of females, like males use -chan toward women. But in XXXHolic it -kun was used by a dude....so does that mean he's teasing him? Shows some respect? Or what does it mean if a dude uses it?
meidei wrote:King InuYasha wrote:Why does the Japanese language use Kanji? Why not consolidate to completely using either Hiragana or Katakana?
Many reasons. In not-so-random order:
a) Japanese are attached to their script. (We all are. English has historical spelling -really messed up-, French has also -to a ridiculous point of using 4 letters to spell the sound /o/, Greek also - thanks god it got a bit simplified with the abolishment of the useless non-spoken accent marks) .
b) Many homophones. Japanese doesn't have a large variety of sounds. With just 5 vowels and 14~15 consonants that must come in pairs of C-V or C-j-V (this is, open syllables) you don't have many possible combinations. Kanji helps a lot here.
c) If kanji were to be abolished, all written material would became unaccessible to the future generations.
d)Since Japanese is written without any spacing, the mixture of all three scripts help to tell where the word start and where it ends. Getting rid of Kanji would require introducing new punctuation rules. And judging from romanized Japanese I have read, they are not really agreeing on a standard.
etc.
Oh, and sorry for any spelling or grammar errors, it's really late in my timezone and I'm not really in a position to proofread.
King InuYasha wrote:meidei wrote:King InuYasha wrote:Why does the Japanese language use Kanji? Why not consolidate to completely using either Hiragana or Katakana?
Many reasons. In not-so-random order:
a) Japanese are attached to their script. (We all are. English has historical spelling -really messed up-, French has also -to a ridiculous point of using 4 letters to spell the sound /o/, Greek also - thanks god it got a bit simplified with the abolishment of the useless non-spoken accent marks) .
b) Many homophones. Japanese doesn't have a large variety of sounds. With just 5 vowels and 14~15 consonants that must come in pairs of C-V or C-j-V (this is, open syllables) you don't have many possible combinations. Kanji helps a lot here.
c) If kanji were to be abolished, all written material would became unaccessible to the future generations.
d)Since Japanese is written without any spacing, the mixture of all three scripts help to tell where the word start and where it ends. Getting rid of Kanji would require introducing new punctuation rules. And judging from romanized Japanese I have read, they are not really agreeing on a standard.
etc.
Oh, and sorry for any spelling or grammar errors, it's really late in my timezone and I'm not really in a position to proofread.
Thanks for that explanation...
So, if Japanese had 14 consonants and 5 vowels, then that means there is a max of 70 C-V combinations?
Compared to English, which has 21 consonants (including y) and 5 vowels, meaning a max of 105 C-V combinations...
Hmm... It seems to make sense, but I dunno.
The spacing thing makes sense. Though, I thought there were standards for Japanese Romanization?
And I've noticed in the karaoke of the eighth Detective Conan opening, I hear "wa" but "ha" is written on screen... Why?
And I've noticed in the karaoke of the eighth Detective Conan opening, I hear "wa" but "ha" is written on screen... Why?

soratothamax wrote:so if a guy used -kun toward another guy....what does that mean?
I don't see men using -kun with each other often...

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