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    Glossary and vocabulary

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    • J
      Jaquobus Premium Member @LegitPancake last edited by

      @legitpancake That's because “hai” doesn't strictly means yes, but that the proposition of the question is true. There's actually a linguistic paper from 1998 about this topic. Just shows you that translation between languages, especially between different language families can be tricky.

      You can't spell Keikaku without Kei – Vote for Sagrada Reset!

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      • myskaros
        myskaros Staff @LegitPancake last edited by

        @legitpancake said in Glossary and vocabulary:

        @paul-nebeling What’s extra confusing is when “hai” means no. I never understood that lol

        It can happen in English too. Consider the question "You don't want a drink?"

        • Yes, I don't want a drink.
        • No, I don't want a drink.

        It's just dependent on context and how the translator is translating.

        Whoever said nothing's impossible never tried slamming a revolving door.

        Paul Nebeling 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • Paul Nebeling
          Paul Nebeling Premium Member @myskaros last edited by

          @myskaros Something tells me that in Japanese, that sentence would start with Hai, no matter how it is written in English.

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