Sometimes salarymen are badasses though.Inazuma wrote:サラリーマンのバカヤロウw

Sometimes salarymen are badasses though.Inazuma wrote:サラリーマンのバカヤロウw

hashiriya1 wrote:English isn't his first language. Be nice.fvgazi wrote:I still can't get past the poor grammar and misspelling of the thread title. I'm not sure if it was meant to be ironic.
Those shoes sure are funny though.

Inazuma wrote: サラリーマンのバカヤロウw
Now this is the most stupidious thing i ever heard of.If anything you should have more respect for a man who fucks other men. 'Cause y'know, they're fucking men. Not a soft nice woman - that's easy. Men who fuck other men are more of a man than men who fuck girls.
My tenth grade year we lived in New York and all the kids at school cared a lot about how folks dressed. I just dressed like I normally did in Alabama, which wasn't particularly nicely because clothes just weren't that important. So my pants weren't as baggy as everyone else's. Most of the students I interacted with regularly at some point actively made me feel uncomfortable because of the clothes I was wearing.Hatta wrote:I never went to a school with uniforms and never once worried about my clothes. Kids should learn not to waste time with trivial stuff like that. If adults force them to wear certain clothes they will 1) not learn to work in a heterogeneous environment and 2) place undue importance on dress because adults seem to think that it's important.
If your kids can't concentrate because of what they or their neighbors are wearing, it's not a problem with the clothes. It's a problem with the kids*. They're going to have to learn to act responsibly eventually, shoving them all in uniforms just covers up the problem.
*By which I mean, it's a problem with the teachers. If you're trying to teach math before the kids are capable of sitting quietly, you're doing it wrong.
I always wondered about that myself. I have heard many people say 誰々のバカ on Japanese TV and thought it should be a はor が myself. Have I been hearing things wrong all these years or do they really say の?hashiriya1 wrote:Inazuma wrote: サラリーマンのバカヤロウw
I am at work and my work computer doesn't have Japanese typing capabilities, but the "no" should be a "ha (wa)" or "ga", depending on your emphasis. Otherwise it just says "salaryman's idiot/asshole/moron/fuckwad/imbecile/etc, etc" Maybe that's what you meant!
The salaryman life ain't so bad. I survived it. Some of the OLs were cute, so that helps you during a 10 to 12 hour shift.
So should a school have a dress code policy? That is, list what is and what is not acceptable to wear?Hatta wrote:I never went to a school with uniforms and never once worried about my clothes. Kids should learn not to waste time with trivial stuff like that. If adults force them to wear certain clothes they will 1) not learn to work in a heterogeneous environment and 2) place undue importance on dress because adults seem to think that it's important.
I am still confused over whether to say は or が in these kinds of situations.Inazuma wrote:I always wondered about that myself. I have heard many people say 誰々のバカ on Japanese TV and thought it should be a はor が myself. Have I been hearing things wrong all these years or do they really say の?hashiriya1 wrote:Inazuma wrote: サラリーマンのバカヤロウw
I am at work and my work computer doesn't have Japanese typing capabilities, but the "no" should be a "ha (wa)" or "ga", depending on your emphasis. Otherwise it just says "salaryman's idiot/asshole/moron/fuckwad/imbecile/etc, etc" Maybe that's what you meant!
The salaryman life ain't so bad. I survived it. Some of the OLs were cute, so that helps you during a 10 to 12 hour shift.
I learned my Japanese from video games and anime so I didn't have a lot of things properly explained to me. I learned from watching other people.
I honestly don't know if you're joking or not, but w/e:AznKhmerBoi wrote:so what is the proper way to phrase taht?![]()
hashiriya1 wrote:English isn't his first language. Be nice.fvgazi wrote:I still can't get past the poor grammar and misspelling of the thread title. I'm not sure if it was meant to be ironic.
Those shoes sure are funny though.