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Dr Spin - September 2007

Ha

September 11th 2007 07:54
Ha is a Japaneses Kana which can be written in Hiragana or Katakana.

Hiragana - は This can be remembered by thinking 'haha, look at my skinny girlfriend', if you think of the left line as the skinny lady and the left line as a man with his arm out.

Katakana - ハ. This can be easily remembered as it's near identical to Japanese Number 8 - Hachi (八


Ha, when written in Hiragana can also be pronounced as Wa when used as a particle. As a particle, Wa indicates the object of a sentence.

EG,

Watashi wa Dr Spin.
わたし は Dr Spin.
As for me, I am Dr Spin.

Neko wa ringo o taberu.
ねこ りんご を 食べる
As for the cat, it is eating an apple.

Ha is also a word meaning Tooth. It is Represented by this Kanji - 齒
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Japan: Part One. Alone In the Airport.

September 8th 2007 15:16
Kansai Airport
Kansai Airport - I Remember this


Japan is a trippy place. Especially when you’re one of five Australians traveling there, and you’ve ended up at a massive Japanese airport, with no one to collect you, and no idea what to do.


This is, I can tell you, scary. Especially when you’re a pack of limited vocab Gaijin who really have no idea what’s going on.

We sent the most proficient of us to the counter to go ask what was going on. A few minutes later something comes over the loudspeaker mentioning our school. There’s only so long that this kind of uncertainly can be hidden behind counting Vending Machines.

Nobody comes. We are alone and abandoned in a Japanese airport.

Then, a Godsend. Our Aussie teacher rings. They’ve managed to work out that the woman meant to be picking us up has been delayed. We have someone else coming to pick us up.

A woman with average English come along. She takes us to the train. I ask her what her name is and, having learned somewhere that all Japanese names have other meanings, I ask her what her name means. It ends in ‘Ko’ is all I remember, so it’s something child, which doesn’t really stand out as distinctive. She is very polite, and tolerant of my stupid Gaijin questions.

The thing that stuns you when you get out of the airport at Osaka is that it looks like Brisbane. It was a wet night – those first few days was all pouring rain and shimmering concrete.
We got to the Hotel.

You know who likes to stay in Japanese hotels enough to pay for the TV? Me neither, but I’d guess a lot of them are lonely men. Out of the eight TV channels, four were porn, and one of the ‘Drama’ shows of the other three was about a girl who liked to ride a bike in her underwear, whose bottom was of some great importance to the plotline.

Japanese porn is nothing though. All the naughty bits are blurred out.

We talk for a bit, my friend and I, before retiring to bed. Tomorrow is another long day.

IMAGE
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O

September 4th 2007 03:04
O is a letter in Japanese.

It can be written in Hiragana - お

Or Katakana - オ

O can also be used as a Honorific to be added to the start of certain words.

Money - かね
Alcohol - さけ
Name - なまえ

With the honorific O they develop as follows:

Money - おかね - Okane.
Alcohol - おさけ - Osake
Name - おなまえ - Onamae.

Both words share the same meaning - the latter though, is more polite.
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