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Officer Kaoko

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Everything posted by Officer Kaoko

  1. I created a forum and a wiki for our community. Feel free to join ^^

  2. LOL! I had no idea what cartoon is that at first XD

    I searched the pic on Google. I typed 'Anime teaching', and that pic happened the one I picked. Well, it was the best one among the good ones :D

    I am glad you found a new discovery because of me, lol ^^

    Happy watching¬

    Oh, yeah! And Kiel...

  3. Seriously... this made me laugh. Why would Ran, Kogoro and Conan be on the list ? And after that... 'Is Chekhov awesome?' and the options is only 'yes' and 'yes' ? LOL !
  4. Now how the personality match up, but the way how they look Conan: main character, spectacles, Agasa as... (like Sherlock and Watson) -> Nobita; main character, spectacles, Doraemon as... (Like Conan and Agasa) Ayumi -> Shizuka... umm, just the only girl in the group of boys. Mitsuhiko -> Soneo... the way they look. Genta -> Gian... the same as you dscribe, hehe. Agasa -> Doraemon... they invent stuff (not really in Doraemon's case ). Here -> http://www.detectiveconanworld.com/wiki/Detective_Boys#Trivia
  5. They kinda look alike in some ways, IMO . Mine is (just created and uploaded recently): Detective Boys and Nobita & his friends. And Doraemon and Agasa~
  6. The new actor and actress who will be taking the lead role on the new Detective Conan live action Ummm... seriously? o_O Additional images~ Source: http://tieba.baidu.com/f?kz=995276176 I can't wait to see the comedic actings of the new actors ...
  7. Oh yeah, and Kiel-chan... our blog URL has been changed to -> http://japanese-ken.blogspot.com

    Just informing you if you didn't know ^^

  8. This one shot is by the mangaka of Detective conan and is his first new work in over 14 years. Summary: Tell Me A Lie is about a girl Terumi Arai (新井輝海, Arai Terumi?) who has the ability to read a persons mind when she is looking into their eyes. Anyways I hope Gosho continues this shot, it looks cool !! But I can't see that happening for awhile . Anyways, what do you think of the one shot ?
  9. *I mean I already saw the thread, I will reply soon [hopefully] :)

  10. Hi Sherry ^^

    Wow, that's good to hear. So it's holiday after you submit your essays? :D

    Regarding the dA, if you have drawings, you could submit it there and share it with us. There's also a lot of Shinichi X Shiho pairings fan art XD and many good Haibara fan arts!

    I will check the thread and reply :D

  11. Thank you for adding me as a friend. Now... you added me twice XD

  12. Thank you for adding me as a friend :D

  13. thanks for the friends add :D

  14. Thanks ATTENTION: Umm... I am not really sure if what I put worked our right or not, so I would like your suggestions and ideas for our community -> http://www.misterpoll.com/polls/515599 Hiragana: Lesson - 17 'ち' [chi] & 'ぢ' [ji] ち, in hiragana, or チ in katakana, is one of the Japanese kana, which each represent one mora. Both are phonemically /ti/ although for phonological reasons, the actual pronunciation is ‘chi’. Pronunciation: 'ち' is romanized 'chi'. Word with 'ち': Word begins with 'ち': 血/ち (chi -> blood) 小さい/ちいさい (chiisai -> small; little; tiny) 'ち' at the end: 口/くち (kuchi -> mouth) 日/にち (nichi -> day) 土/つち (tsuchi -> soil; dirt; earth) 毎日/まいにち (mainichi -> every-day) Other sounds: The pronunciation of the character 'し' can also be changed to 3 different sounds. Stroke order: ______________ The character 'ち' may also be combined with a dakuten, changing it into ‘ぢ’ in hiragana, and 'ji' in Hepburn romanization. With the dakuten added the pronunciation is changed, to 'ji'. ち + " (dakuten) = ぢ (look below) Due to both ‘じ’ and ‘ぢ’ having a similar pronunciation it may be difficult to differentiate them. However, one way to tell the difference is by removing the dakuten and seeing if the original word is a shi or chi. Post 1945, no words in the Japanese language start with the letter ‘ぢ’. Pronunciation: Same with ‘じ’, ‘ぢ’ is romanized ‘ji’ and also pronounced the same way. ______________ YO-ON In the Japanese language there are also contracted words called 拗音 (yo-on) (as mentioned in lesson 12). They are made up of two letters written together. A Hiragana ending with “i” such as ki (き), shi (し), etc... followed by a small ya (ゃ), yu (ゅ) or yo (ょ). The hiragana’s ending with “i” also include their dakuten and handakuten versions. The yoon’s for 'chi' are: ちゃ/cha (Pronounced: chya) Ex. 茶色/ちゃいろ chairo (brown) ちゅ/chu (P: chyu) Ex. 中国/ちゅうごく chuugoku (China) ちょ/cho (P: chyo) Ex. 頂戴/ちょうだい choudai (please give me (verb; comes at the end. Mostly used by women)) The yoon’s for 'ji' are: ぢゃ/ja (P: jiya) ぢゅ/ju (P: jyu) ぢょ/jo (P: jyo) ______________ Task: You shall write 'ち' & 'ぢ' 50 - 100 times in your textbook. If you want, like with the previous lessons, write 'ち' 70 times and 'ぢ' 30 times. Memorize the shape, the stroke order, the sound, the pronunciation (echo the sound of the character each time you write it down), etc. And after you've done that, write ‘た' and 'ち' one after each repetitively (た, ち, た, ち, etc.) 50 times (100 if you have time). PS. Any edition to this lesson will be edited here -> http://japanese-ken.blogspot.com/2011/01/hiragana-lesson-17-chi-ji.html And check out the Hiragana: Lesson 17 - 'ち' [chi] & 'ぢ' [ji], it has been modified by Kenny-sensei .
  15. Hirgana: Lesson 16 - 'た' [ta] & 'だ' [da] Pronunciation: 'た' is romanized 'ta' and pronounced ‘ta’ as in ‘star’. Word beginning with 'た': 田/た (ta -> ricefield) 竹/たけ (take -> bamboo) 鷹/たか (taka -> falcon; hawk) 建物/たてもの (tatemono -> building) 対/たい (tai -> versus; anti) 畳/たたみ (tatami -> tatami mat) 食べる/たべる (taberu -> to eat) Stroke order: ______________ The character 'た' may also be combined with a dakuten, thus changing it to ‘だ’ in hiragana, and 'da' in Hepburn romanization. With the dakuten added the pronunciation changes to 'da'. た + " (dakuten) = だ (look below) Pronunciation: ‘だ’ is romanized ‘da’, pronounced ‘da’ as in ‘dan’. Word with 'だ': 大仏/だいぶつ (daibutsu -> large statue of Buddha) 出す/だす (dasu -> to take out, to show, to turn in, to publish, to send, to begin, to serve food) だから (dakara -> so; therefore) Task: You shall write 'た' & 'だ' 50 - 100 times in your textbook. If you want, like with the previous lessons, write 'た' 70 times and 'だ' 30 times. Memorize the shape, the stroke order, the sound, the pronunciation (echo the sound of the character each time you write it down), etc.
  16. Thanks for the link, Cheesus-kun :grin:! *downloading* Oh, did you see the new design for the blog? ________________________ Review: Lesson 11 - 15 Yosh! We had now finished the 's' section! We now covered the vowels (あ, い, う, え, お), the 'k's (か, き, く, け, こ), and the 's's (さ, し, す, せ, そ,). And now we are just going to do a quick review! Now that we've learnt the third section (s) of the Japanese characters, which are: さ, し, す, せ, and そ. Now we are going to review them. Now, if you still have problems with them, I recommend you write them again (exercise in your textbook). Memorize the order of the strokes, the sound of it (pronunciation), their shape, etc. Easy! Here're some Japanese words having only the characters you've learnt so far (not including any Romanji)... see if you could read them :mrgreen: : 貸す/かす (to lend) 椅子/いす (chair) 行く/いく (to go) 喰/しょく (to eat, drink) 隠す/かくす (to hide) 開く/あく (to open) 学校/がっこう (school) 恋/こい (love; tender passion) 愛/あい (love affection) 赤い/あかい (red) 青い/あおい (blue) Here are the characters we have learnt so far (try to be familiar with them ): And also, don't forget about YO-ON in the 'き' [ki] & 'し' [shi] characters! And... with the dakuten added to the following characters, the sound of the characters may be changed; 'k' to 'g' and 's' to 'z' (し an exception: the dakuten added the sound changes to 'ji').
  17. How do you like my edition in your userpage in the wiki? ^^

  18. My bad >:o I hope we get to it soon ^^

  19. I feel bad because I haven't finished reading your stories TT^TT I can't remember which part I reached.. I planned to read them soon ^^ Can't wait to see what happens b(^^)d

  20. Wow, all the characters? Even the Katakana?

  21. @Zaku: Don't worry. I appreciate your recommendation :grin:. Thank you! The last and the final character of the ‘s’ section... 'そ' [so]! Hiragana: Lesson 15 - 'そ' [so] & 'ぞ' [zo] Pronunciation: 'そ' is romanized 'so' and pronounced ‘sou’ as in ‘sorry’.. Word beginning with 'そ': その (sono -> that... near you (near the adressee)) 空/そら (sora -> sky; heaven) そと (soto -> outside) そば (soba -> side) そんな (sonna -> like that; that kind of) そう(sou -> yes, yeah; it's like that; that's how it is) Stroke order: ______________ The character 'そ' may also be combined with a dakuten, changing it into 'ぞ' in hiragana, and 'zo' in Hepburn romanization. With the dakuten added the pronunciation is changed to 'zo'. そ + " (dakuten) = ぞ (look below) Pronunciation: ‘ぞ’ is romanized 'zo' and pronounced 'zo' as in 'zombie'. Word with 'ぞ': 象/ぞう (zou -> elephant) 象牙/ぞうげ (zouge -> elephant’s ivory, tusk) Task: You shall write 'そ' & 'ぞ' 50 - 100 times in your textbook. If you want, like with the previous lessons, write 'そ' 70 times and 'ぞ' 30 times. Memorize the shape, the stroke order, the sound, the pronunciation (echo the sound of the character each time you write it down), etc. And after you've done that, write 'さ', 'し', 'す', 'せ', and 'そ' one after each repetitively (さ, し, す, せ, そ, さ, し, す, せ, そ, etc.) 50 times (100 if you have time). ______________ I change our site's design... what do you guys think ? ^^ we changed our URL to -> http://japanese-ken.blogspot.com
  22. Lashedcheek~ YO! Oi oi!

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