Since the average person can't tell Asians apart, how are they suppose to differentiate asian words?
>>72869280
the ones that looks like hieroglyphics from the predator movie are korean
the ones that tryhard to be cute and quirky are japanese
the ones that looks like over-complicated and prim japanese are chinese
>>72869280
Look really really hard, work those eyes and you'll eventually see it
Asians tend to have higher IQs because of it.
>>72869280
>left to right (korea china japan)
>different variation of chinese character(漢字)
>>72869724
Chinese and Koreans do some odd things with some of those radicals in their Japanese characters. 术 just looks like a misprint of 木 or 犬.
Dumb rice monkeys.
>>72869983
>Japanese characters
China invented the character first and it spread to its neighbors.
And China (and Singapore) currently use simplified version of their original characters, 簡體字 since 1964 by communist party.
>>72869280
is the lack of verb conjugation in chinese because of their writing system?
>>72869280
Easy. If it's Kanji with Hiragana and/or Katakana mixed in, it's Japanese. If it's Kanji without that, it's most likely Chinese. If it's neither, it's Korean
>>72869983
kys weeb
>>72869280
<More variations(TradCHN|SimpCHN|SimpJAP)
Note that some Traditional Kanji differs from Traditional Chinese as well(not just the simplified characters), such as 翻 being the Trad(and simplified) Chinese character and the simplified Jap Kanji(Shinjitai) whereas 飜 is the Traditional Kanji. Another example would be 擧/挙(Old Kanji/Simp Kanji) vs 舉/举(Trad Hanzi/Simp Hanzi). Not to say there are Kanji ’invented' by the Japanese such as 凪,働 and 喰。
>>72870131
The current '简体’ is actually 简化字;‘简体字’ technically refers to the batch of simplified characters proposed by the ROC.
Examples include 囯, which is a ‘简体字’, whereas '国‘ is the 简化字/日本新字体 and 処, which is both a ‘简体字’ and 日本新字体 whereas 处 is the ‘简化字’。
If its a bunch of circles and straight lines its korean
If its still simple but curvy, its jap
If it makes you want to kill yourself for even thinking of reading it, its chinese
... Been trying to learn all three and stuck to korean in the end. Also of the three, id say korean is the most similar to western languages due to hangul being so easy to learn.