Alright, busting out my IPA. These really are what is listed.
The two "h"s, [h] and [ħ}
"d"s, [d] and [dˤ]
"s"s, and [sˤ]
Kh is [x]
ahyn is [ʕ]
"r"s, [r] and [ɣ] (but the latter is romanized as GH)
"th"s, [θ] [ð] and [ðˤ] (ðˤ can also be [zˤ])
"t"s, [t] and [tˤ]
"k"s, [k] and [q]
I forget what else, but this is dragging off topic.
Good thing I can just take classes here because Japanese is one of the standard languages taught at highschool and college AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
あははははははははははははは ばかがいじんのおに!
But no seriously Japanese is really easy to grasp once you get hiragana and katakana down. Grammer is simple, vocabulary makes sense; the only thing difficult is kanji. So speaking and listening to Japanese is shit-easy once you've taken a couple years of it. Which is good because then you can somewhat successfully be a tourist.
And are you referring to stuff like シツソン? Really after a while you learn to tell them apart pretty easy, sometimes simply by context. "himishi" ヒミシ would be weird but "himitsu" ヒミツ you would know is correct, so it'd register as tsu anyway.
stuff like せ and サ isn't bad either because Katakana is always "sa" and hiragana is always "se", and you certainly won't see them mixed with characters of the other group.
Yeah and flying is easy too, the only thing that's difficult about it is staying airborne.
Well that depends.
If you're going for heavier than air flight then yeah. But if you're smart and go for lighter than air flight then you got nothin to worry about once your airborne. Unless you're incredibly stupid and use hydrogen or a shitty bag.
Yeah and flying is easy too, the only thing that's difficult about it is staying airborne.
Well that depends.
If you're going for heavier than air flight then yeah. But if you're smart and go for lighter than air flight then you got nothin to worry about once your airborne. Unless you're incredibly stupid and use hydrogen or a shitty bag.