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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Do Japanese people see ツ as a smiling face?
Can be either ツ (ツ) (ツ) etc I joked creating a cyclope version with the (ソ) As you can see from the other answers, it is not common knowledge and I then think it is mostly used by people close to the IT world, not the most famous trend around here
- Why is there a ツ in 四ツ谷? - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
四ツ八ツハくさのたねなり 九ツハはり The numerals express time in these poems The tsu after the number kanji is always written by using ツ, not つ This kind of ツ was rarely omitted in kana-kanji writings, so if a number kanji is not followed by ツ, the kanji is read differently
- How Is つ ツ origin 川? - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
There are actually three candidates for the origin of つ and ツ One is 州, which in the Jiankang dialect was pronounced "zhōu" Zhōu → tsu (origin of kana) → shuu (modern on'yomi) The next is 川, which is generally pronounced "chuan" in Chinese Chuan → tsuan → tsu (origin of kana) → sen (modern on'yomi)
- What does シャレオツ mean? - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
しゃれおつ or シャレオツ means cool, fashionable Above Another version: おつしゃれ is a rearrangement of the same word however this version tends to be used amongst media piers, show biz etc This version is not grammatically correct but still spoken as such
- How to understand チラツ - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
It is 「チラシ」, not 「チラツ」 It is the シ in サシスセソ, not the ツ in タチツテト Finally, forget the kanji some people mentioned in the comments above for now To refer to "flyers", 「チラシ」 is basically never written using that kanji
- Why does Japanese not have a native tu sound?
Minor quibble: You say, " tu (トゥ) were replaced with tsu (ツ)" It seems more accurate to say that " tu (トゥ) became tsu (ツ)", or " tu (トゥ) shifted to tsu (ツ)" This was a gradual process caused by the biomechanics of the shape of the mouth when making certain sounds, and we see analogues in languages around the word
- Difference between katakana so and n
It's easy once you get the difference between シ (shi) and ツ (tsu) For these, it's easy to remember because of how the hiragana versions are written し is written from the top, to bottom, to right And thus, the katakana version is written left to right, and has a more horizontal angle
- Where can I find full katakana combinations list? [closed]
Katakana have some combinations beyond low ャ, ュ and ョ that uses low ァ, ィ, ゥ, ェ, and ォ But I can't find complete list of such combinations
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