お前はアニメが本当に好きなら、なんでまだ日本語が話せないの?
Untitled
I can't speak it because I don't need to in order to watch raw anime. I can still understand it just fine.
話せないとでも思ったか?
I’ll learn Japanese one day, you smug bitch’
I dropped learning japanese after hiragana, how do I get my motive back bros?
話せるモン!
What does の mean as a sentence ending particle?
In most cases it either becomes a か subsitute or a だ subsitute.
誰か、「アノンが日本語を話せません」と言いましたかい?
I don't get this meme.
や、完全にバレちゃった!日本語話せないのはごめんね
>話せない
lmao
アニメが大嫌い
うるせんだよこのブス犯すぞこら
の is used as a sentence ending particle with questions to accentuate that you want to receive the answer. Makes the questioning tone stronger compared to plain questioning sentences.
Most definitely it's not used like this .
ぼ... 僕は頑張っているんだけど日本語が上手になってるのがめちゃ難しいわ
>わ
ロンドン
ン
ド
ン
これを全く読めないぞ俺は。いったい何を言っている?
なんだ~王女様かい? Zig Forumsにようこそ
話すってこう言うことか?
Go learn Chinese, then come back to japanese and you can easily learn kanji!
>お前
間に合わない
>tfw can read everything in the thread but can't make complete sense of any of it
bros i shouldn't have ankidroned...
新種のおかまか
藁
アニメはどうでも良い!
漢字が好きでこの神様に見捨てられた鴃舌を勉強し続ける。
笑うなこのカス
lol in your ill-conceived attempt to come off as smart you've just confirmed it's used the same way as か. And if you listened to nihongo more you'd know in informal speech, especially female, it also functions pretty much like だ. Here,let Jim Breen enlighten you:
>(at sentence-end, falling tone) indicates a confident conclusion;
>(fem) (at sentence-end) indicates emotional emphasis;
>(at sentence-end, rising tone) indicates question.
不合格だ。
damn I can read that, feels weird
>slow to learn and quick to forget
>gave up after 700 kanji and 300 words
>tfw
I tried. I wish I were intelligent and motivated enough to learn Japanese, but I'm not. There's nothing I can do about it. Nonetheless, I still like anime and I will continue watching it.
>700 kanji and 300 words
Did you do some dumb shit like RTK?
Doesn't mean anything, it's just for flavouring.
Yes, but I don't see how RTK is dumb. If I had purely studied vocab, I would not learn how to write Japanese.
Dude was asking about の particle used in the OP post, mate. That refers to the third item you've listed. In such case you can't substitute it with か nor だ. You gave shitty advice, which is exactly what I pointed out. Maybe you should read the questions and think a little before answering.
Lol.
I can see how you wouldn't be motivated to learn something you will never really use
Way to backpedal mate. He was right, get over it.