They’re probably done eating by the time that’s finished being said.
「やば」ってよく使った単語について面白い投稿だ。
これは本当にそう
学生の時、お母さんに「『ヤバイ』ばかり言ってたら、語彙力(ごいりょく)がない人だと思われるよ?!」って怒られたことがあります…
さすがに親ね。
私もうちのティーンにちゃんと話すのをよく口うるさく言っています。
その当時は「はぁ〜めんどくさ〜」って思っていたけど(笑)、今は感謝しています
This thread is a cool balm liberally applied to the devastating psychological damage caused by needing to know a billion different ways of saying “seems like”, and the process of figuring out which one it wants feeling a lot like asking your partner “what’s wrong?”.
I wish there was a handy “seems like” cheat-sheet that puts them in some kind of order, but it would probably just look like a detective’s wall with bits of string linking things together. Before they figured out who dunnit.
It increasingly feels like I’m memorising what individual sentences want rather than gaining any kind of intuitive understanding why they want what they want.
But, I’ll keep slogging through it. Even getting a vague feeling and understanding 50% is better than doing what I’ve been doing for the last few years.
at some point, I just decided to quit worrying about it and use whatever feels right at that moment. Probably nonsensical, but, well, I don’t have time for this
So… say it another way?
Why I don’t feel it is this hard
Can you give an example that will confuse me?
You seem to have stumbled upon an ancient relic of Bunpro’s past. This relic has thus been removed (at least from here) and we appreciate your help with the matter. Should you or any other brave soul happen upon such a relic, please feel free to report your findings.