more soe more soe lol
more soe more soe lol
Rbt,
Don't forget to work on the correction enunciation. This reminds me of a
situation (many years ago in high school) which involved a toilet, bookstore, a brother that understands a lot of
Japanese but has a very hard time replying in Japanese, and a Japanese uncle that understands only a little English.
The last time I visited (about two years ago) my uncle says he still tells that story about my brother . .
. and it never fails to get at least a chuckle out of everyone. LOL
-SwingerMD
It Don't Mean a Thing if it ain't got that swing. . . . -Duke Ellington
How do you confuse a toire and a honya? Unless you were
using "benki" That maybe *could* sound like English "bookstore" I suppose...
Maybe you need to tell the whole
story.
(I recall getting a suppressed giggle when a travel agent described the "terrible" time they had on a fam
trip to Japan at a dinner trying to figure out how to ask for a fork. Gesturing, drawing pictures, etc etc. I'm
sure the Japanese staff was having fun with them, since the Japanese word for the dining implement known as a "fork"
is...
"fork(u)" (u usually being silent).)
The opposite of love isn't hate.
It's apathy.
I don't mind hearing them saying,
"I will get some cok(e)" or "I want to eat lice".
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