Daichi #5
Tumoshimo
So... sit, relax, enjoy.
And welcome on Daichi #5.
Of course, by Daichi tradition we will start with a Neko maidens.
😁
Cherry blossom is speculated to be native to the Himalayas.
Currently it is widely distributed, especially in the temperate zone of the Northern Hemisphere such as:
Europe, West Siberia, South Korea, China, Japan, United States, etc.
Many of the varieties that have been cultivated for ornamental use do not produce fruit. Edible cherries generally come from cultivars of the related species Prunus avium and Prunus cerasus.
Horyuji Temple
It is the the oldest surviving wooden structures in the world, conveying images of Japan as it existed more than 1,300 years ago.
It is the world heritage.
Evolution of Nissan Skyline (Godzilla)
Nissan Skyline GT-R34
Let's see some funny pictures.
And for the end, let's learn numbers!
😃
I hope you have all enjoyed, this is all for today.
If you like it vote, spread and if you will donate something too: money, food, weapon.
So see ya again next weekend and catch new Daichi!
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Has cute girls~
has a vote~
Voted
Ten Teen TEEENN xDDD LOL
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Haz JDM haz vote
😃
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Just a couple corrections.
四 is also rea😛 "yo" or "yon".
六 is written and pronnounced as roku, although the Japanese "u" is not very long.
七 is also read "nana".
八 is written and read "hachi".
Haha, I see you went for some corrections as well 😛
Though need to correct you; you probably refer to "shichi", not "nana" ;P
"Nana" or "shichi", depending on the context.
Wthinking of shichi wrote nana xD
Yeah, and "zero" you can read as "rei" too. for "hachi" I didn't see. Thanks mate. 😁
I am trying for start to be simple as possible, later I will add more confusing stuff.
Correction on the numbers:
4 = shi, yon
6 = roku
7 = nana, shischi
8 = hachi
9 = kyuu, ku
40 = yon juu, it is never "shi juu"
1000 = sen, issen
Shi, Shichi, and ku are never used after 20 (ni juu), just to point that out 🙂
Apart for specific counters that force you to use nana or yon, I haven't heard of that rule (after 20...). Could you point us to some detailed explanation? Would be interesting to read.
The only explanation I can find is that the Japanese never use shi juu or ku juu or shichi juu etc. They simply don't use it after 20, thus creating the rule "never after 20". Additionally it seems that Japanese people themselves will usually correct you if you say "shi juu", so I guess shi, shichi and ku just simply doesn't exist as a number after 20.
Well I never heard of "shi juu" either, but I have seen 二十七日 read as "ni juu shichi nichi". Also nine o'clock is "ku ji" not "kyuu ji" , so I would expect 二十九時間 to be read "ni juu ku ji kan" for example.
People say many things, consider how many English native speakers say "should of done" and confuse "your" with "you're". Hence my asking for a concrete source.
http://www.yesjapan.com/YJ6/question/2969/how-come-40-cant-be-shi-juu
The best I can come up with of a source actually. The book I'm using to learn basic Japanese was made by the same people as those behind that page. According to what I know, they are a couple (the wife is native Japanese apparently) and they have been teaching Japanese for years.
But that was not what I asked... However, that site actually has an answer for me: http://goo.gl/i8p6DN - it seems both are ok in this case.
Thank you guys for pointing mistakes and correcting.
Mina doumo arigatou gozaimasu.
どういたしまして
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