I wish you'd fix the ac in my truck for me.. but I know it's completely different than houses.
I know it's a pretty penny in a shop to, and that the inside dash most likely needs to be completely
pulled off.
I used those words because I was trying to illustrate a point but it's fuggin me up to.
こ="ko" ん="n" に = "ni" ち= "chi" は=”ha" Always remember ん= is short "n” sound
There are 2 n's in konnichwa romaji. one is just ん... the 'ha' is pronounced 'wa' for reasons
it's easier for better nihongo speakers to illustrate. By the way 2="ni" It came to me when
I read the op, but I thought I was prolly wrong. I studied a bit. >
I'm not. I tried.. but I always have too much bullshit going on every time I try lately, and I think I'm better off drinking
あぉんjkvbjfvn
WHY YOU NO DO ENGRISH COMPUTER
anyway yeah.. Had a prretty frustrating day today.
It sounds pretty dope, but I can't swim. I also don't live anywhere near a good body of water,
but I might consider it if I was actually making some decent savings between paychecks.
I think that's about where I stopped. I figured I would've lost what little knowledge I had of japanese by now anyway,
but a surprising amount just came back to me from typing a few words. >_>
I forgot about that though I had a feeling something was wrong with it when I looked at it.
I remembered having to spell it differently in my lessons, but I couldn't remember why or how.
So it's the "Ha" symbol pronounced "Wa" to show it's an old style greeting or sentence fragment.
noted.
I stopped my lessons, but I was doing basic hirigana.. It helps to equate each symbol to something it looks like.
ex. man with a hat, fisherman with pole etc/ memrise had a lot of good ones, and the lessons were free.