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princess33
04-06-2009, 11:33 AM
hi all :)

can someone read this !!!>> that i can't:(

i want to know what's written here


http://img4.imageshack.us/img4/1477/dsc00063s.th.jpg (http://img4.imageshack.us/my.php?image=dsc00063s.jpg)

bluepenguin
04-06-2009, 11:51 AM
Love.

princess33
04-06-2009, 11:56 AM
reaaaaaaaaaaaaaaly i did't know !!

thanks ^^

Memento Mori
04-06-2009, 12:18 PM
Yeah, that's the sign for love.

I always remember it as the sign that looks like a face.

Look closely, you might see it.

-akichan-
04-06-2009, 03:47 PM
A very regonized and known Chinese character. Besides love, it also means affection which this meaning isn't seen as much as love, or means to be fond. When this character is written with some other characters, it can form different meanings of love.

I really like how this character was written. The very top part of the character means family or marriage, which successes when love exist. The part under that means "heart" in general, but it also means soul, which you have when you love someone with both your heart and soul. The last part was created from another character "友" it means friends or friendship. Well I guess it's because love doesn't only occur in boyfriend and girlfriend, but it also exist in friends and family, with all your heart and soul.

princess33
04-07-2009, 12:25 PM
wow aki chan arigatou gozaimasu ^^


so it's written in my t-shirt and i want to know the meaning ^_^

LavaBug
04-07-2009, 02:50 PM
...because love doesn't only occur in boyfriend and girlfriend, but it also exist in friends and family, with all your heart and soul.

Or the passion a men has for his favorite beer...

-akichan-
04-07-2009, 05:16 PM
Or the passion a men has for his favorite beer...


LOL sure that works! It's passion a person has for anything. Lava you make me laugh all the time xD

Datenshi
04-08-2009, 02:59 AM
ビール愛。

...For some reason that makes me think of a tattoo. Or a T-shirt.

I've read somewhere that the character is depicting a person bending over clutching his chest from the pain he feels in his heart.

Kind of deep, don't you think.

-akichan-
04-08-2009, 11:27 AM
ビール愛。

...For some reason that makes me think of a tattoo. Or a T-shirt.

I've read somewhere that the character is depicting a person bending over clutching his chest from the pain he feels in his heart.

Kind of deep, don't you think.

Haha, it'd be awesome if there's a shirt with ビール愛, and people would buy that for 100 bucks eh xD

I find it it would be quite popular if something has アニメ愛 printed...people here are very into アニメ~

LavaBug
04-08-2009, 12:16 PM
Well since this is "animeforum" that's kinda to be expected ^^°

AF SUCKS
04-08-2009, 01:01 PM
people here are very into アニメ~
Anime wa chotto suki.

Yiuel
04-08-2009, 04:45 PM
Anime wa chotto suki.

ちょっとだけ?

実は俺もそのぐらいかな。

On topic (somehow). I prefer the word アニメ好き for any purpose like someone who deeply likes anime. It's the most common pattern for someone who really likes something.

I use it myself to name an hypothetic neighborhood where non-Japanese fans of manga and anime would gather, emulate some aspects of Japanese culture (especially those parts showed in manga and anime) they like and live together that way.

-akichan-
04-08-2009, 10:24 PM
Well I agree using アニメ好き better. However, I would suggest "love anime" for those whose room is full of posters of anime girls and mini models of cute girls from their favorite animes, since I've known some people especially guys who are like that lol...

princess33
04-11-2009, 07:43 AM
ビール愛。

...For some reason that makes me think of a tattoo. Or a T-shirt.

I've read somewhere that the character is depicting a person bending over clutching his chest from the pain he feels in his heart.

Kind of deep, don't you think.


lol

in fact that was written in my t shirt :p

my sister know that i love japan and i try learning Japanese so she buy that shirt for me ...but i want to know what's the meaning cuz i don't love wear something that i don't know what's written on it :)


and i have another one i want to know what's written on it :redface:

http://img16.imageshack.us/my.php?image=22090094.jpg

Datenshi
04-11-2009, 08:17 AM
> 土 空 火 水 (the four large characters at the top)

土 -> Dirt/Earth
空 -> Sky/Air
火 -> Fire
水 -> Water

> 知識即力量 (the string of characters beneath that, next to the numbers)

This is traditional Chinese, so you might want to wait for someone proficient in Chinese to come along, but let me see if I remember enough from my Chinese classics class in high school to get it right.

知識即(チ)力量 -> "Knowledge is power"

princess33
04-11-2009, 09:05 AM
Datenshi you are great thanks a lot for helping ^^

-akichan-
04-11-2009, 01:15 PM
> 土 空 火 水 (the four large characters at the top)

土 -> Dirt/Earth
空 -> Sky/Air
火 -> Fire
水 -> Water

> 知識即力量 (the string of characters beneath that, next to the numbers)

This is traditional Chinese, so you might want to wait for someone proficient in Chinese to come along, but let me see if I remember enough from my Chinese classics class in high school to get it right.

知識即(チ)力量 -> "Knowledge is power"

I'm full Chinese, and I learned about the creations and history about Chinese characters before. However in the lessons I took, the meanings are different. Let say...

空 -> Sky/Air

but in Chinese, 空 means empty. So it's kinda hard even though Japanese often use kanji (chinese), but the way it is written often is different from Chinese. I often get kanji and Chinese mixed up =P

LavaBug
04-11-2009, 01:42 PM
As stated before it's the four elements (the western ones I believe)
This is a popular motif for tattoos I believe ...At least I see this one frequently
(and cuz it's being tattooed doesn't mean it's not unchinese ^^°)

Datenshi
04-11-2009, 02:38 PM
I'm full Chinese, and I learned about the creations and history about Chinese characters before. However in the lessons I took, the meanings are different. Let say...

空 -> Sky/Air

but in Chinese, 空 means empty. So it's kinda hard even though Japanese often use kanji (chinese), but the way it is written often is different from Chinese. I often get kanji and Chinese mixed up =P

空 does also mean "empty" in Japanese, but I've never seen it mean that in this context.

I often find it disconcerting as well that so many characters look alike, but their meaning is slightly (or even significantly) different.

Which is kind of interesting, because, as you know, the word "kanji" means just that; "Chinese" characters (漢字). Even today, all Japanese students are taught how to read Chinese (in much the same way that Latin used to be taught in the Western world) as part of their classics education, which a lot of students find very difficult (I know I did).

Yiuel
04-11-2009, 04:30 PM
So it's kinda hard even though Japanese often use kanji (chinese), but the way it is written often is different from Chinese. I often get kanji and Chinese mixed up =P

At least, you can get a lot of the jukugo's more easily than I, being doomed to be a latin-language-derived native speaker. :P

Otherwise, 空 seems to have its Japanese "sky,air" meaning deriving from empty. Like, the emptiness over our heads. Weird etymology? Indo-european linguistics is ten times weirder than that.

「空で言う」 is also a very informative expression.

-akichan-
04-11-2009, 07:58 PM
Well I guess that character has lots of meaning. Japanese kanji does have multiple meanings and pronouciations while Chinese has only one meaning and one pronouciation. xD

Yiuel
04-11-2009, 11:49 PM
Well I guess that character has lots of meaning. Japanese kanji does have multiple meanings and pronouciations while Chinese has only one meaning and one pronouciation. xD

The deeper you go, the weirder it gets. And you never know what surprise awaits you at the next corner. I have a very useful character dictionary here (the Kanken Kanji Jiten) and... how many weird things have I seen :eek:!

Japanese can go as far as writing the name down with the original Chinese compound, and yet use a reading that is a Japanese compound with the compound's elements completely unrelated to the written kanji's meanings. Sometimes, I'm just going *facepalm* :banghead: in front of some of these.

(Not that I don't like them. It's one of the wonders of Japanese written language. It was just very shocking for my poor mind at first. Got used to it, and indeed, I'm now kinda surprise when compounds DO match. :laugh: )

princess33
04-19-2009, 08:25 AM
well every one thanks ^^

OtakuInu!!!
05-04-2009, 03:53 AM
yes I do!!!!

it means ai- love!!!

like what is written on Gaara-sama's forhead:laugh:!!!

LavaBug
05-04-2009, 05:13 AM
Old thread is old...
Plus - answer has been given multiple times already...
please refrain from making redundant posts in the future...
-love, bug

[U.S.N]Senkan_California
05-14-2009, 04:46 AM
ai(あい) means 'love'
sometimes it reads 'itoshii(愛しい)'

LavaBug
05-14-2009, 05:20 AM
good, since people obviously are unwilling to read previous posts -
this is closed -_-