here my numbers ... your number 2 and 8 is a bit wrong !
here were my first try: D
It was not easy to decode the letters: D
here my numbers ... your number 2 and 8 is a bit wrong !
here were my first try: D
It was not easy to decode the letters: D
Spoiler!
my number 2 and 8? cause that was a cropped screen print from MS word+^_^+
also updated OP to include Font download to use in MS word and whatever else your computer lets you select fonts+^_^+
Last edited by Chik'Tikka; Jun 11, 2012 at 06:57 PM.
ah a see u have it from here or ? pso2font
this is sans-serif.. in the game (CBT), it was perhaps a different font
Am I the only one who didnt find it that difficult to read signs just by looking at them for a bit?
This was something I did randomly during Alpha 2, most of these signs don't even exist really now.
Spoiler!
PSO2 JP Characters:
SHIP 02:
Kyoushu HU: 45 FI: 51 RA: 28 FO: 15 BR: 44
GODS IS IT EVER.
ARGH JAPAN. ARGH!Check out these two groups of kanji:
Group ONE: (complex kanji)
履 歯 紫 顔 僕 鼻
Group TWO: (simple kanji)
丹 屯 斤 杉 后
Which do you think are college-level words? And which are simple kid-words?
ANSWER:
Group one:
履
put on pants
歯
tooth
紫
purple
猿
monkey
顔
face
僕
me
聞
listen
鼻
nose
Group two:
丹
a color called 'cinnibar,' which I didn't even know ENGLISH had a word for that color
屯
a garrison of 17th century troops under the command of a Shogun
斤
unit of measurement only used with bread loaves
杉
a specific kind of cedar
后
'dowager Empress', a word only used by retainers in the Imperial Court.
....THE TERRIBLE SECRET IS:
THERE IS ALMOST NO CONNECTION BETWEEN HOW USEFUL A KANJI IS AND HOW COMPLEX IT IS!
ラブ、アンド、ピース。
-everything i type is completely serious and you should be offended no matter the content jaja-
translated pre-OB skill trees link
Ma name's Satoshi Sakai and I sell My room and My room accessories! Uh huh huh!
Kanji make seem really intimidating at first glance. Once you start learning the really basic characters (mostly radicals) that are taught in lower grades of Japanese school, you start to look at kanji in a slightly different way. Being able to recognize the radical in a more complex character can sometimes help you understand and get the more complex meaning. Unfortunately, this doesn't work for all kanji.
The more kanji you learn, the faster you'll start picking up others. It works like a snowball effect. Same as in English, you can pick up the meaning of a kanji (or word in English) you don't know based on context of the sentence.
Learning anything is like a snowball effect. The problem with Kanji is that it takes a long time to get that snowball up to a decent size. I mean heck, compare it to learning English. In our school systems, I learned everything I needed to really know by the time I was out of elementary school. Sure there were words I still needed to learn, but I had the ability to figure out any word on my own using a dictionary by that point.
With Japanese, you've finally become literate by the time you leave High School having learned 2,136 Kanji plus I'm assuming the 983 used in personal names. The sad part is, although you have finally learned enough to be literate, you still actually only know a fraction of the total number of existing Kanji.
KANJI IS OF THE DEVIL
Connect With Us