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ArcticMyst Security by Avery

~desu

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Sep 16, 2007
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Who comes up with this shit?
I don't see any humor in this.

I hate the internet.
 





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Ace82 said:
WTF is the deal with the 650nm right eye and 532nm left eye?

Hahaha, nice way of putting it!

And I have no idea where this crap comes from. This is pretty pointless...

Translated.

Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein Sein sein sein sein sein sein sein sein

-Mark
 

Ace82

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RA_pierce said:
Who comes up with this shit?
I don't see any humor in this.

I hate the internet.

haha, at least I'm not the only one who feels the same way. When I saw this shit all I could think was WTF? :-/

Even Mr. Hankey from South Park was more creative.

Hankey_flush.gif
 

artix

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May 24, 2008
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LRMNmeyer said:
[quote author=Artix link=1226287943/0#11 date=1226622901]010101110110100001100001011101000010000001101001011100110010000001110011011011110010000001110011011100000110010101100011011010010110000101101100001000000110000101100010011011110111010101110100001000000110010001100101011100110111010100111111
010010010111010000100111011100110010000001100001001000000110110101100101011011010110010100101110[/quote]
011011010110010101101000
 

Ace82

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You know what I really hate about the internet? The fact that every day I discover more stupid people doing even stupider things. It's not even funny anymore, it's actually getting really sad.
 
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pseudolobster said:
The anime these are from is called Rozen Maiden, and desu is a japanese sentence participle, part of the word "is" or "to be". It's used in conjunction with the verb "wa", at the end of sentences to give the verb subject.

>95% of my posts are very short. I make up for it with posts like this. As a white Japanese student (a rare thing - weaboos are too lazy to actually learn the language they adore) I feel compelled to make a 'long post is long'.

Wa ([ch12399] - normally pronounced ha, but in particle form is wa for some reason...) is a particle, usually meaning 'is', or 'concerning'. Eg: uchi wa aoi desu, the house is blue, anata no okaasan wa kusai desu, your mother is smelly.

The 'no' ([ch12398]) particle is a possessive, meaning 'your', 'its', 'his' etc. Of course if you were insulting somebody (describing their mother) you wouldn't bother with the polite topic marker 'desu' (desu is not a particle), you would probably use 'da', 'ne', or nothing at all.

Transitive verbs (eg punch, kill, eat as opposed to sleep, sit, walk) carry the particle o ([ch12434]) eg sushi o tabe mashita, I ate sushi. Notice the 'shita' indicating past tense.

Verbs don't use 'desu', they use 'masu'. This can be twisted for a negative or for tense. Whether it's past or present tense depends largely on the context.

masu - do / doing
masen - do not / not doing
mashita - did
masendeshita - did not

Particle ni ([ch12395]) is usually associated with a place, day or time. Particle mo ([ch12418]) usually means also, as well as. De ([ch12391]) has many uses, often relating to a purpose or method of some kind. Basu de ikimasu, I went by bus. You can also use de to say you were going somewhere for a reason or purpose.

Some words such as frequency words (eg sometimes, always, never) don't need a particle. Some particles can be combined to mean other particles entirely. Demo ([ch12391][ch12418]) at the beginning of a sentence means but, however, on the other hand.

Aaaaand I can't be bothered to elaborate further - most of you are pretty confused already, eh.
 
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VillageIdiot said:
[quote author=pseudolobster link=1226287943/0#13 date=1226629640]The anime these are from is called Rozen Maiden, and desu is a japanese sentence participle, part of the word "is" or "to be". It's used in conjunction with the verb "wa", at the end of sentences to give the verb subject.

>95% of my posts are very short. I make up for it with posts like this. As a white Japanese student (a rare thing - weaboos are too lazy to actually learn the language they adore) I feel compelled to make a 'long post is long'.

Wa ([ch12399] - normally pronounced ha, but in particle form is wa for some reason...) is a particle, usually meaning 'is', or 'concerning'. Eg: uchi wa aoi desu, the house is blue, anata no okaasan wa kusai desu, your mother is smelly.

The 'no' ([ch12398]) particle is a possessive, meaning 'your', 'its', 'his' etc. Of course if you were insulting somebody (describing their mother) you wouldn't bother with the polite topic marker 'desu' (desu is not a particle), you would probably use 'da', 'ne', or nothing at all.

Transitive verbs (eg punch, kill, eat as opposed to sleep, sit, walk) carry the particle o ([ch12434]) eg sushi o tabe mashita, I ate sushi. Notice the 'shita' indicating past tense.

Verbs don't use 'desu', they use 'masu'. This can be twisted for a negative or for tense. Whether it's past or present tense depends largely on the context.

masu - do / doing
masen - do not / not doing
mashita - did
masendeshita - did not

Particle ni ([ch12395]) is usually associated with a place, day or time. Particle mo ([ch12418]) usually means also, as well as. De ([ch12391]) has many uses, often relating to a purpose or method of some kind. Basu de ikimasu, I went by bus. You can also use de to say you were going somewhere for a reason or purpose.

Some words such as frequency words (eg sometimes, always, never) don't need a particle. Some particles can be combined to mean other particles entirely. Demo ([ch12391][ch12418]) at the beginning of a sentence means but, however, on the other hand.

Aaaaand I can't be bothered to elaborate further - most of you are pretty confused already, eh. [/quote]
I'm not confused at all :cool: it's nice to see someone else that can speak Japanese ;D
 

daguin

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VillageIdiot said:
Aaaaand I can't be bothered to elaborate further - most of you are pretty confused already, eh.


Yes. This was NOT 99% lulz. Don't ever do this again.

If it happens again I promise to write a treatise on the Coordinated Management of Meaning theory, going into significant nuance about strange and charmed loops.

Just trust me, you do NOT want to go there.

Peace,
dave
 




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