Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
They all begin with a subject pronoun. See, Misha has nicknames for Hisao, Shizune, and Yuuko. Hicchan, Shicchan, and Yuu-chan could be read as "he-chan, she-chan, and you-chan." This doesn't really work unless you pronounce them like English names, and chances are that it's just a random coincidence, but... yeah.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to graph some conspiracy correlations.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to graph some conspiracy correlations.
"Sometimes I sit for hours weighing the fine distinctions between spunk, pluck, balls, nerve, chutzpah, gall, and moxie."
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
You can ask Kenji to borrow his puppets....Spoon wrote:They all begin with a subject pronoun. See, Misha has nicknames for Hisao, Shizune, and Yuuko. Hicchan, Shicchan, and Yuu-chan could be read as "he-chan, she-chan, and you-chan." This doesn't really work unless you pronounce them like English names, and chances are that it's just a random coincidence, but... yeah.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to graph some conspiracy correlations.
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
No doubt feminist organisation codenames for some heinous plot!Spoon wrote:They all begin with a subject pronoun. See, Misha has nicknames for Hisao, Shizune, and Yuuko. Hicchan, Shicchan, and Yuu-chan could be read as "he-chan, she-chan, and you-chan." This doesn't really work unless you pronounce them like English names, and chances are that it's just a random coincidence, but... yeah.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to graph some conspiracy correlations.
- kslover
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Tue May 19, 2009 9:10 pm
- Location: you mean right now? or my location in life?
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
ach da meine gutteeAkira wrote:No doubt feminist organisation codenames for some heinous plot!Spoon wrote:They all begin with a subject pronoun. See, Misha has nicknames for Hisao, Shizune, and Yuuko. Hicchan, Shicchan, and Yuu-chan could be read as "he-chan, she-chan, and you-chan." This doesn't really work unless you pronounce them like English names, and chances are that it's just a random coincidence, but... yeah.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to graph some conspiracy correlations.
all of which makes me anxious, at times unbearably so
wir sind wir
REJECT FALSE ICONS!
if you're losing your soul and know it then you still have a soul to lose.
its better to light a candle than complain about the dark.
wir sind wir
REJECT FALSE ICONS!
if you're losing your soul and know it then you still have a soul to lose.
its better to light a candle than complain about the dark.
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
Ach du meine Gütekslover wrote:ach da meine gutteeAkira wrote:No doubt feminist organisation codenames for some heinous plot!Spoon wrote:They all begin with a subject pronoun. See, Misha has nicknames for Hisao, Shizune, and Yuuko. Hicchan, Shicchan, and Yuu-chan could be read as "he-chan, she-chan, and you-chan." This doesn't really work unless you pronounce them like English names, and chances are that it's just a random coincidence, but... yeah.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to graph some conspiracy correlations.
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
If Misha had a nickname for herself, it would probably be Micchan...
"Sometimes I sit for hours weighing the fine distinctions between spunk, pluck, balls, nerve, chutzpah, gall, and moxie."
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
Misha IS her nickname, isn't it? According to the main site, her name is Shiina “Misha” Mikado...
See for yourself.
http://katawa-shoujo.com/characters.php
See for yourself.
http://katawa-shoujo.com/characters.php
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
What about the other characters? I mean, she basically takes the first two or three letters and adds '-chan' to it.
Lily = Liichan
Hanako = Haachan
Emi and Rin's names are too short to really even need nicknames.
Lily = Liichan
Hanako = Haachan
Emi and Rin's names are too short to really even need nicknames.
You just KNOW there's gonna be a Nurse X Akira X Hanako threesome witnessed by Yuuko at SOME point during the Emi path...in Lilly's room.
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
No they aren't.
Riichan
Mmchan - By that I mean to imply she'd shorten Emi to that subtle 'um' noise the japanese seem to use to indicate a response in the affirmative, like we use 'uh-huh' in the states. (Please don't take that wrong. I don't know the language, so I'm inferring from the context of various media. If I'm way off base please let me know.) Can't think of a better way to spell that though. *shrug*
Riichan
Mmchan - By that I mean to imply she'd shorten Emi to that subtle 'um' noise the japanese seem to use to indicate a response in the affirmative, like we use 'uh-huh' in the states. (Please don't take that wrong. I don't know the language, so I'm inferring from the context of various media. If I'm way off base please let me know.) Can't think of a better way to spell that though. *shrug*
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
Actually, what I meant to say is that putting them in nicknames would only make their names longer instead of shorter...vermithrx wrote:No they aren't.
Riichan
Mmchan - By that I mean to imply she'd shorten Emi to that subtle 'um' noise the japanese seem to use to indicate a response in the affirmative, like we use 'uh-huh' in the states. (Please don't take that wrong. I don't know the language, so I'm inferring from the context of various media. If I'm way off base please let me know.) Can't think of a better way to spell that though. *shrug*
You just KNOW there's gonna be a Nurse X Akira X Hanako threesome witnessed by Yuuko at SOME point during the Emi path...in Lilly's room.
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
True, but I wouldn't be surprised if Misha did it anyway. And it only makes them longer in English, really. Riichan would be easier to say than Rin-chan because it lets the mouth relax more and 'um'-chan has one less sylable than Emi-chan.Roxius wrote:Actually, what I meant to say is that putting them in nicknames would only make their names longer instead of shorter...
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
IIRC in japanese there is no um syllable, there's ma mi mu me and mo, so the probable nickname would be Mu-chan or Umu-chan (if you add a u in the beginning), but that sound like a cow nickname or candy or something... Probably E-chan or even Emi-chan would be easier to pronounce and less awkward than U/Mu-chan
Siiiiigh....
- kslover
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Tue May 19, 2009 9:10 pm
- Location: you mean right now? or my location in life?
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
my spelling is atrocious in any languageNichtDu wrote:]Ach du meine GüteAkira wrote:No doubt feminist organisation codenames for some heinous plot!Spoon wrote:They all begin with a subject pronoun. See, Misha has nicknames for Hisao, Shizune, and Yuuko. Hicchan, Shicchan, and Yuu-chan could be read as "he-chan, she-chan, and you-chan." This doesn't really work unless you pronounce them like English names, and chances are that it's just a random coincidence, but... yeah.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to graph some conspiracy correlations.
all of which makes me anxious, at times unbearably so
wir sind wir
REJECT FALSE ICONS!
if you're losing your soul and know it then you still have a soul to lose.
its better to light a candle than complain about the dark.
wir sind wir
REJECT FALSE ICONS!
if you're losing your soul and know it then you still have a soul to lose.
its better to light a candle than complain about the dark.
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
Well, the sound I'm trying (and failing) to describe isn't really a literal um to begin with. It's not a sound used in English. It's more like the ng in ung or ing, but held longer and with no 'guh' at the end. The jaw doesn't move when it's made. Is something like that used in japanese for "yes" or "sure," "yeah," or "uh-huh" or whatever?abscess wrote:IIRC in japanese there is no um syllable, there's ma mi mu me and mo, so the probable nickname would be Mu-chan or Umu-chan (if you add a u in the beginning), but that sound like a cow nickname or candy or something... Probably E-chan or even Emi-chan would be easier to pronounce and less awkward than U/Mu-chan
Bah, I feel like I'm getting nowhere. If the above doesn't make any sense to you I'll stop worrying about it. Thank you for trying to help, though.
Re: Hey, I figured something out about Misha's nicknames.
I think this may be what you're looking for; it's a nasal consonant with the back of the tongue at or near the uvula (wiki page):vermithrx wrote:Well, the sound I'm trying (and failing) to describe isn't really a literal um to begin with. It's not a sound used in English. It's more like the ng in ung or ing, but held longer and with no 'guh' at the end. The jaw doesn't move when it's made. Is something like that used in japanese for "yes" or "sure," "yeah," or "uh-huh" or whatever?abscess wrote:IIRC in japanese there is no um syllable, there's ma mi mu me and mo, so the probable nickname would be Mu-chan or Umu-chan (if you add a u in the beginning), but that sound like a cow nickname or candy or something... Probably E-chan or even Emi-chan would be easier to pronounce and less awkward than U/Mu-chan
Bah, I feel like I'm getting nowhere. If the above doesn't make any sense to you I'll stop worrying about it. Thank you for trying to help, though.
(1) Sounds where the airflow is stopped completely, e.g. /t/, /d/, /k/, /g/, /p/, /b/, /m/, /n/, etc.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_phonology wrote:/ɴ/ is a moraic nasal, fully a stop before another stop (1), where it becomes homorganic (2) with that consonant, but not achieving full occlusion (3) before fricatives (4) or between vowels, where it is realized as a nasal vowel. Word finally before a pause, it may be realized as a uvular nasal stop (5), a bilabial nasal stop (6), or as a nasal vowel.
(2) It moves to the same place in the mouth as the consonant, such as becoming /n/ before /t/ or /m/ before /p/
(3) Full occlusion = complete closure of airflow
(4) Sounds where the airflow is forced through a narrow channel, e.g. /s/, /z/, /f/, /v/, etc.
(5) i.e. /ɴ/
(6) i.e. /m/