Japanese egg (tama'go)
>>15639676
some interesting packaging there, quite witty in it's own way.
But can it jump through 3 hoops?
>>15639768
Six hoops.
Japanese rice (gohan)
>>15639894
>>15639955
I just can't seem to get it right, this time I forgot to erase the background.
What a failure! I'm going to stop trying to be funny, I always end up doing stupid shit like this and it ends up not being funny at all.
>>15639967
The master has failed more times than the beginner has even tried.
>>15640015
Woah...
>>15639967
I guess you are right but it's so discouraging.
In any case does anyone have some japanese cook books or links or should I ask /ck/? I remember there being a torrent with a whole bunch of them but I can't remember where I got it.
I'm not even quoting the right posts now, what a day!
>>15639676
>(tamago)
Fixed that for you.
Gude-tama...
>>15640354
たまごは卵
玉子の別は要、そしてtama'goって書いた
>>15640377
weeb
>>15640377
Actually, no. Hepburn uses the ' exclusively to separate ん+あ/い/う/え/お from な/に/ぬ/ね/の, ie n'e vs ne. This is for the sole purpose of being able to differentiate whether the romanized part is one or two syllables. Using standard Hepburn, there is no difference between simple nouns like 卵 and noun combinations, which is only relevant in linguistics anyway, where you are much more likely to use - to mark a noun combination (ie tamago = n, tama-go = n+n, while nouns like 高等学校 would be two entirely separate nouns, ie n n). At this point, you would hopefully not use Hepburn at all though, since the system had several disadvantages regarding serious linguistic analyses.
Eggs smell bad and probably taste bad. I've never eaten one and never will.
>>15640606
Not hepburn.
Original Japanese romanisation form I invented.
Only nihongo masters will understand.
>>15641293
They taste like farts smell.
Extremely gross food experience.
>>15641563
A jay who actually knows pitch in standard Japanese? Color me impressed.
I don't know what the hell >>15640377 is trying to say, though. 意味不
>>15641563
Oh wait, but you also wrote "gohan," and if the prime were a downstep, it should have been "go'han." So I guess 'g is a ng.
Okay, but few native Japanese speakers (even NHK announcers) use ng consistently these days (I certainly don't). Also, I think the proper use of ng is contingent on knowing the pitch. So you should learn pitch first if you really care that much about sounding like Tetsuko Kuroyanagi.
>>15639955
LOL