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2:02 AM
does anyone know what happened to sawa?
he was the site's leading user when I first made an account last year and now I don't see him on here
 
 
2 hours later…
3:36 AM
@Aerovistae He stopped participating some time ago. Recently his account was removed at his request.
 
 
1 hour later…
5:04 AM
@DariusJahandarie how quaint! there was no explanation whatsoever? no probable cause?
 
5:21 AM
@Aerovistae I just omitted them. But since you insist, he was unhappy with a number of members and decided to leave. That's the extent to which I understand it.
 
 
2 hours later…
7:09 AM
@snailboat Them furiganas
hmm can't find that thing I was looking for
 
 
8 hours later…
3:23 PM
これさ・・・
ぼったくり
 
4:23 PM
一本は20円だから8%でござる。
と言う事は1円60銭
何万本買ったら効くと思う。
 
 
3 hours later…
7:19 PM
for those who live in or have been to Japan--
wondering about these...
The Japanese giant hornet (Vespa mandarinia japonica) is a subspecies of the world's largest hornet, the Asian giant hornet (V. mandarinia). It is a large insect and adults can be more than 4.5 centimetres (1.8 in) long, with a wingspan greater than 6 centimetres (2.4 in). It has a large yellow head with large eyes, and a dark brown thorax with an abdomen banded in brown and yellow. The Japanese giant hornet has three small, simple eyes on the top of the head between the two large compound eyes. As the name implies, it is endemic to the Japanese islands, where it prefers rural areas where it can...
are these not as big an issue as I'm imagining? Because here in 'merica people would freak the hell out over this....I would be afraid to go outside if these lived in my neighborhood, I would probably move to a different region
 
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Hey, you have Vespa mandarinia giant hornets in Thailand too, don't you? :-)
 
Anonymous
> Advice in China is that people stung more than 10 times need medical help, and need emergency treatment for more than 30 stings. The stings can cause renal failure.[11] Stings by Asian giant hornets killed forty-one people and injured more than 1,600 people in Shaanxi province, China in 2013.[12]
 
Anonymous
Yikes!
 
Anonymous
> Each year in Japan, the human death toll caused by Asian giant hornet stings is around 30 to 40.[9][10]
 
I'm not sure about the species, but I once definitely had an hornet nest in my garden!
Oh, scratch that! It was twice!
I have heard that it's about 10-20 people here in Thailand every year.
And yes, they look yellow, with big heads and big eyes!
 
Anonymous
7:24 PM
Eep!
 
Anonymous
> Those who died, on average, were stung 59 times (with a standard deviation of 12)
 
Kinda like an ant on steroid with wings!
 
Anonymous
I really hope to never be stung by hornets 59 times.
 
@snailboat I'm pretty sure that their solidarity is strong! :-)
One of them stings, the others will follow.
Interesting how they communicate among themselves!
@snailboat I imagine that each of them is worse than a bee sting. And one bee sting can give me a fever a couple of days.
I'm experienced at bee stings!
 
Anonymous
7:54 PM
I'm not!
 
Anonymous
I'm afraid of bee stings.
 
Anonymous
10:53 PM
@DariusJahandarie Have you considered phrases like 遣らずの雨? 恥知らずの人? 分からずです?
 
Anonymous
11:04 PM
Martin considers ず to be a "precopular noun", what other people call a "no-adjective". That's syntactically like a 形容動詞 except it takes の instead of な. But it's a special type of precopular noun: it takes に instead of the expected で for the infinitive form ずに, and に is omissible.
 
Anonymous
So ず has the range of forms ずに has, and ず also appears before copulae including の and です and である
 
Anonymous
I think his term "precopular noun" comes from being like a noun except that it can't appear as a subject or object like a pure noun can
 
Anonymous
11:21 PM
I rather like "no-adjective" better...
 
Anonymous
Of course, that's purely a synchronic analysis
 
@snailboat Hmm, forgot about those.
 
Anonymous
Though there are a few exceptional ones I think where you find で instead of に, like in 〜足らずで, and な instead of の like in 向こう見ずな〜, that don't quite match the usual usage of ず
 
Anonymous
Which can presumably be treated as lexicalized exceptions
 

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