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Is it just me... |
Anonymous
Member #3,724
July 2003
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... or are these smileys? |
Jonny Cook
Member #4,055
November 2003
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The Japanese are a happy people. The face of a child can say it all, especially the mouth part of the face. |
ReyBrujo
Moderator
January 2001
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Hehehe Katakana TSU and SHI do look like smileys, surely I didn't try to understand it all, but it makes a reference to Super Mario -- |
Bruce Perry
Member #270
April 2000
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クッパに捕らわれたマリオ(下のオープニン 捕 And others マリオ which cracks (looking at the opening under in クッパ, don't you think? in order) to start helping, ピーチ princess who goes on a journey to large venture so far with standpoint as opposite. ' In the スーパーマリオ ' series same straw raincoat enemy キャラ, the gimmick the stage which appears hard (above total 40 staging! ) ピーチ princess joy and anger grief and happiness "utilizing" "the sir angrily", keeps advancing. This time, it probably will keep introducing the method of using 2 large actions only of ピーチ princess, with the picture photograph. Reversing the standpoint of all previous games, this game sees Princess Peach (Toadstool) setting out on an epic adventure to save Mario, who has been captured by Koopa (see the opening below). Princess Peach has to put her "human emotions" and "kassaa" whatever that is into use as she proceeds through the game (over 40 stages in total!) encountering familiar enemies from the "Super Mario" series as well as many new gimmicks. In this [preview?], we look at some screen shots of two more high-action play modes where you control other characters besides Princess Peach. Where did you get the image? I want to see those screen shots -- |
ReyBrujo
Moderator
January 2001
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-- |
khristina yer
Member #5,795
May 2005
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No they are not smileys. They are a sound in there language. |
Anonymous
Member #3,724
July 2003
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I lost the source. The point, however, wasn't the meaning of the text but the smiley-like chars. |
Bruce Perry
Member #270
April 2000
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Quote: The point, however, wasn't the meaning of the text but the smiley-like chars. You could learn from the Japanese and their smiley-like chars, sir. -- |
Pedro Avelar Gontijo
Member #5,372
January 2005
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I thought so too when I started to learn japanese ---------- |
Anonymous
Member #3,724
July 2003
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Why on earth would I try to learn such a stupid language? :S |
Marcello
Member #1,860
January 2002
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because your face creeps me out? |
Anonymous
Member #3,724
July 2003
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Quote: because your face creeps me out?
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Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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Quote: Why on earth would I try to learn such a stupid language? :S You're asking us questions that only you can answer. Everyone has their own reasons for learning a language. You've referred to it as a "stupid" language, and I would disagree. The Japanese language is structured rather nicely and I found it relatively easy to learn (the basics, anyway). It's very interesting. "He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe" |
Anonymous
Member #3,724
July 2003
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Bah. Japanese is like VBScript! |
Chris Katko
Member #1,881
January 2002
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I want to learn sign language. The only language where you can talk without making a sound, or having to hear a sound. That definitely has its benefits. -----sig: |
Samuel Henderson
Member #3,757
August 2003
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Quote: Bah. Japanese is like VBScript! Care to elaborate that idea? ================================================= |
Rampage
Member #3,035
December 2002
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There are not stupid languages, only stupid people, but you knew that . -R |
Crazy Photon
Member #2,588
July 2002
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Quote: Why on earth would I try to learn such a stupid language? :S Extra points for Bruce for the explanation though ----- |
Steve++
Member #1,816
January 2002
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Quote: Why on earth would I try to learn such a stupid language? :S I dunno... maybe to pickup Japanese girls? |
Karadoc ~~
Member #2,749
September 2002
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A stupid language? On the original topic: yeah, those do look like smilies. ----------- |
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