How to Speak SUPER RUDE Japanese Like a Bad Boy

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  • Опубліковано 29 бер 2023
  • Learn Japanese with Yuta: bit.ly/3mKCRWu
    Support me on Patreon: goo.gl/aiWNd5
    Twitter: / thatyuta
    Instagram: / thatyuta
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    Blog: www.yutaaoki.com/blog/
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 171

  • @ThatJapaneseManYuta
    @ThatJapaneseManYuta  Рік тому +20

    Learn Japanese with Yuta: bit.ly/3mKCRWu

    • @isaiahben-yahweh3245
      @isaiahben-yahweh3245 Рік тому

      My question is have you ever even smoked weed in Japan at all before? Doubt it, unless you've managed to find it in the mountains

  • @DavidCruickshank
    @DavidCruickshank Рік тому +288

    In an alternate universe we have "That Japanese Yankee Yuta" teaching us "How to Speak Japanese Like a good Boy"

    • @Arigator2
      @Arigator2 Рік тому +4

      That is all his other videos. Or maybe not. You don't have to do much to be bad in Japan.

    • @nicbentulan
      @nicbentulan Рік тому +1

      Explain joke please?

    • @evilparkin
      @evilparkin Рік тому +9

      @@nicbentulan In Japanese, yankee (ヤンキー) means delinquent.

    • @nicbentulan
      @nicbentulan Рік тому +4

      @@evilparkin THANK YOU

    • @NAMEREDACTED-lg4bw
      @NAMEREDACTED-lg4bw 10 місяців тому

      Lmfao 😂😂😂

  • @MaryAnnSweetAngel
    @MaryAnnSweetAngel Рік тому +349

    im a woman but i want to be a Japanese bad boy today so im here.

    • @vanessameow1902
      @vanessameow1902 Рік тому +22

      understandable

    • @Treblebeatgames
      @Treblebeatgames Рік тому

      There are no women here. Just Japanese Bad Boys.
      Japanese Bad Boys is non-gendered now.

    • @LegacyXJudah
      @LegacyXJudah Рік тому +12

      😂 same!

    • @FunkyBukkyo
      @FunkyBukkyo Рік тому +16

      Side note: I have a favorable bias towards anime female characters who have masculine speech patterns

    • @invictus82
      @invictus82 Рік тому

      @@galliman123 njpw you mean?

  • @TheOnyomiMaster
    @TheOnyomiMaster Рік тому +67

    An element of "rough" speech that I notice a lot is the trilled/rolled R's, e.g. 2:54 ("ikuzo korrra~!"). Sheena Ringo does that a lot in her older songs (e.g. "Tsumi to Batsu", "Marunouchi Sadistic", "Honnou"), some of which are about the difficulties of life.

    • @vinceontheweb
      @vinceontheweb Рік тому +16

      I was surprised he didn't directly mention this.

    • @FarelLaban
      @FarelLaban Рік тому +1

      I was about to comment this.

    • @1.4142
      @1.4142 Рік тому

      Also Chainsaw Man #5 Ending song

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 Рік тому +5

      Standard Japanese doesn't have rolled r's. Most Japanese can't roll their r's and they don't need to. The rolled r thing is called makijita and, besides its association with gangster talk in popular culture, it's used as a technique to improve one's enunciation. Shiina Ringo was not the first female singer to use a lot of makijita, there was Jun Togawa before her.

    • @Bradgilliswhammyman
      @Bradgilliswhammyman Рік тому +4

      its really tough to do if you are not a native speaker. When I livedin Japan I saw a argument between 2 people outside a supermarket and another inside a macdonalds. They were trilling their Rs. Pretty intense.

  • @toddgreener
    @toddgreener Рік тому +88

    Randomly watching Yuta over the years has given me more Japanese comprehension than 3 semesters at uni, lol

    • @winterwarden
      @winterwarden Рік тому +5

      same, however I'm studying sociology so it's kinda expected lmao

  • @phuquymaile8394
    @phuquymaile8394 Рік тому +16

    Now I know why my Japanese friend looked at me with a panic look when I used those ways of talking. The guy just keep telling me to stop watching anime :v He told me it sounds rough, but I never knew it was THAT rough :v

  • @metallicakixtotalass
    @metallicakixtotalass Рік тому +17

    8:25 reminds me of that great video you did about that song Usseewa, which btw I showed my middle-aged native Japanese tutor and she actually really loved the song because of its honesty, then again she left Japan like 20 years ago partially because of the work culture talked about in that song so maybe her perspective is different.
    In any case, it's a good example how as with everything in Japanese, context is everything. What's suitable for an artistic statement or an anime may not be suitable for real life, or maybe only once or twice in your life.

    • @metallicakixtotalass
      @metallicakixtotalass Рік тому +1

      Also the two characters whose "rough speech" I love the most are Matoi Ryuuko from Kill La Kill and Majima Goro, although his ofc has also a lot of Osaka yakuza stereotype speech.

  • @patrickt.6492
    @patrickt.6492 Рік тому +5

    If I ever get serious about learning Japanese, it will be useful to know the nuances like this.

  • @terminaelegy2144
    @terminaelegy2144 Рік тому +4

    It's great watching his English improve over the years

  • @karry299
    @karry299 Рік тому +7

    "I say, young fellow, verily you seem to have put your seeding implement in your most honorable mother's loins. De gozaru."
    Is that the kind of thing a Japanese bad boy might say ?

  • @sho7078
    @sho7078 Рік тому +8

    1:01 and 13:59 this is how a real Japanese bad boy speak

  • @haltsmaul.
    @haltsmaul. Рік тому +4

    This is a Certified Bad Boy Classic.

  • @TheWieldofrost
    @TheWieldofrost Рік тому +4

    In Detective Conan, I think I hear Conan likes to address close friends like Ran or enemies like Kaito Kid by something sound like "Omae" as well, or at least when he talks in his teenager manner.

  • @apid4075
    @apid4075 Рік тому +4

    Great! I treasure the videos giving a broader perspective over the language with just enough details. Super useful not only to be able to understand what's being said, but also sense the mood and have an idea of who's the person talking. Would love to hear something about outdated Japanese older generations still use, some archaic expression that are still in use while the grammar behind them not anymore, as well as some situational Japanese: talking with classmates (which you mentioned in this video), family, coworkers, parents in law, neighbors, close friends, acquaintances, and so on.
    I guess I have a difficulty judging the expected level of politeness and formality and selecting appropriate expressions. How to sound friendly in some situations and not too friendly in other? It's easy to grasp the meaning behind words and grammar points, but difficult to get how they "feel" (without massive amounts of exposure). Happened to me more than once that I sounded too rough/impolite without my intention which got me into trouble and served as a huge discouragement in my studies.

  • @mmadaus
    @mmadaus Рік тому +3

    13:43 kimi ni todoke, how nostalgic :')

  • @narasimhaniyer6990
    @narasimhaniyer6990 Рік тому +3

    I remember in one of your old videos one of the guys you interviewed called you "usotsuki konoyaro" but it didn't sound rude but friendly.

  • @ItsShaz1
    @ItsShaz1 Рік тому

    Interesting video Yuta.

  • @lmclrain
    @lmclrain Рік тому +1

    Ty for the romaji, it is really helpful

  • @jtmix5545
    @jtmix5545 Рік тому +2

    gangsta yuta😂 pass da joint yo!

  • @XSpImmaLion
    @XSpImmaLion Рік тому +4

    Yankii. xD That's the word you are looking for.
    This video has way less Takeshi Kitano and Crows than I expected, but perhaps it's just that my references are getting too old at this point... xD
    But school delinquents will always, always make me remember Cromartie. xD

  • @PaulHotPants7
    @PaulHotPants7 Рік тому +1

    i loved this subject, i wondering if you will get into more in this topic.

  • @James-vx2wm
    @James-vx2wm Рік тому

    great video

  • @wiandryadiwasistio2062
    @wiandryadiwasistio2062 Рік тому +2

    in regards of honorifics as in 9:49 i _encourage_ japanese speakers to not refer me with honorifics (perhaps you rarely hear ‘yobisute kudasai/呼び捨てください’ but i’ll make sure of that being well-heard) except if they refer me as a third person.
    just like i don’t want people to refer me as ‘sir’, ‘mister’, or if you’re familiar with southeast asia, ‘pak’, or ‘pak cik’. just call me by name _or_ use ‘mas’, a title used by my people to refer to young men (javanese here btw)

  • @andriypredmyrskyy7791
    @andriypredmyrskyy7791 Рік тому

    I can never get enough of the music

  • @mbank3832
    @mbank3832 Рік тому +3

    I couldn't even handle Japanese as a good boy :(

  • @user-vv7pz7hf1j
    @user-vv7pz7hf1j 10 місяців тому +1

    the kunjugation in japanese is fairly easy but the nuances are very deep . e.g for the muzukashikunai you can just think of naruto with his kunai...the worst think of learning Japanese is that Japanese people rarely correct you. I was lucky the last day where one of my sempais corrected me which I truly appreciated. I used dattara instead of sou suru to

  • @DuckKingCall
    @DuckKingCall 4 місяці тому +1

    My name could also be spelled the same way as a japanese slang for cold
    Good to know :)

  • @mksushi5754
    @mksushi5754 11 місяців тому +1

    Although, I'm watching your videos without trying to learn Japanese, I find them interesting even though I plan to only learn Japanese a decade down the line in life.

  • @punimarudogaman
    @punimarudogaman Рік тому +4

    7:30 カレーは辛え!!!😅

  • @gunki-san
    @gunki-san Рік тому +1

    Imagine sounding like Tony Montana from Scarface when speaking Japanese.

  • @emajohnes372
    @emajohnes372 Рік тому

    Hiiiiiij first hehehehehe ❤❤❤❤love your videos I learn alot about japanese from you , I think after this video I gonaa sound like a bad boi 😎

  • @VisiblyJacked
    @VisiblyJacked 4 місяці тому

    I'm sure that my impression of a Japanese bad boy will get me out of trouble next time I get jumped by thugs in Kabukicho

  • @livemyw0rld
    @livemyw0rld Рік тому +4

    This is the funnest Japanese channel Yuta. Having a Japanese wife and getting little refinements like this to what I hear, then described by you, together around her, is omoshiroi to say the least.

  • @acudaican
    @acudaican Рік тому +3

    Watching educational videos on stuff you already know because the videos are often lowkey hilarious.

  • @CraigNess69
    @CraigNess69 Рік тому

    this is very helpful thankyou もっと動画を作るれ!お願いします~

  • @ronzacharias5497
    @ronzacharias5497 Рік тому +3

    this is actually super informataive. i always wondered if putting か at the end of sentences sounded right or not, now i realize i might have come across as too aggressive to my Japanese friends 😅

    • @galliman123
      @galliman123 Рік тому +3

      Honestly your tone and demeanor mean a lot more in conversation. You can always get away with bad language especially if you don't know what it means.
      Lots of Japanese say weird bad english words l

    • @viljamtheninja
      @viljamtheninja Рік тому

      Lol, I'm right there with ya man.

  • @orielortiz2033
    @orielortiz2033 Рік тому +2

    The best example is Sakigake!! Otokojuku

  • @unchozen
    @unchozen Рік тому +1

    yuta smokin that loud

  • @punimarudogaman
    @punimarudogaman Рік тому +7

    Dear Yuta : what is the difference between ZO et and ZE at the end of the phrase ? Example : ( iku zo ) or ( iku ze ) ?

    • @kynemon7669
      @kynemon7669 Рік тому +2

      From what I've heard, "Zo" is sometimes used in real life, while "Ze" is used only in anime.

    • @lovestarlightgiver2402
      @lovestarlightgiver2402 Рік тому +2

      I could be wrong, but I think "zo" is a tougher version of "yo", while "ze" is a tougher version of "ne".

  • @nadiah3664
    @nadiah3664 Рік тому +38

    I love how little purpose this lessons has. :D Let me teach you how to say things in japanese, that you will most likely never use, unless your ambitions include becoming a yakuza in japan.

    • @yanneyanenchannel
      @yanneyanenchannel Рік тому +25

      Learning stuff like this can be important for comprehension, though, as well as a lesson in things to avoid/be careful about.

    • @viljamtheninja
      @viljamtheninja Рік тому +13

      @@yanneyanenchannel Exactly. Before learning about how rude "no ka" is, I accidentally used it quite a lot when in Japan because I was never taught not to.

    • @UzumakiHarutoJP
      @UzumakiHarutoJP Рік тому +1

      ​@@viljamtheninja 😭😭 "what's with this guy 🤥 怖ーい!!"

    • @derpydayha7305
      @derpydayha7305 Рік тому +8

      It's pretty useful to know. People say stuff like this jokingly a fair bit so knowing how to talk rough can make you funnier

  • @rad6684
    @rad6684 Рік тому +3

    Very informative.
    I really like how some yakuza-like people in the media talk in a weird rhythm. Can anyone tell more about that?

    • @kimifw58
      @kimifw58 Рік тому

      Doesn't he have a video about yakuza-speak?

  • @ranjanbiswas3233
    @ranjanbiswas3233 Місяць тому

    Oh, you mean, like a Cool boy? 😎

  • @AlkonKomm
    @AlkonKomm Рік тому +2

    "if you use "コノヤロー" in every sentence you will sound very low class"
    ビートたけし would like to have a word with you, yuuta

  • @spooderman9122
    @spooderman9122 Рік тому +4

    Isn't the correct term for changes like あい and おい to ええ and うい to ええ monophthongization and not contraction since it's still the same lentght?

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 Рік тому +1

      Yes. Yuta uses the wrong term, as contraction involves a shrinking, whereas in this case the length remains the same. Monophthongization is fairly accurate. Oi, ai, ui are not exactly diphthongs per se (they can be pronounced as two syllables and they count as two moras) although they do wind up being pronouced as diphthongs most of the time.

  • @TheBombayMasterTony
    @TheBombayMasterTony Рік тому

    This was a funny lesson.

  • @ScrotN
    @ScrotN Рік тому

    Just discovered that I talk like a ヤンキー everytime.
    It's shorter, easier to pronounce and connect sentences so I think I get the reason why ヤンキー talks that way. And sometimes I mix it with 関西弁 because it feels easier to speak that way. More lax equals more use for me

  • @kijeenki
    @kijeenki 10 місяців тому

    use yagaru after everything! for example うせやがれ means ”stfu”

  • @The_official_jaijai
    @The_official_jaijai Рік тому

    I have got to see the full version of the guys asking about paying money back. Where on UA-cam can I find that??

  • @vedritmathias9193
    @vedritmathias9193 11 місяців тому +2

    Hi Yuta,
    When I was taking Japanese in high school, I and my classmates would often say farewell by saying "死んではないで", rather than saying something like "じゃあ" or " まったね". I don't recall the teacher ever correcting us on this. How would you rate it?

    • @coolbrotherf127
      @coolbrotherf127 7 місяців тому

      I don't think real Japanese people say goodbyes by exclaiming that they aren't dead. They'd say something like お疲れ様 which is part of the longer phrase お疲れ様でした which means "thank you for your hard work". Or just また明日 which means "see you tomorrow"

  • @Pixelasi
    @Pixelasi Рік тому

    あざます!

  • @osmanemrebaskan5153
    @osmanemrebaskan5153 Рік тому +1

    I am disappointed that ryuji from persona 5 is not in this video

  • @melovemealot8546
    @melovemealot8546 Рік тому +2

    Yuta can you make a video about the words like わざわざ、ぎりぎり、もともと etc whether they are used or not, because of the anime since they say they can't be learned, idk these kinds of words that sound rare are really used in real life jsjw

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 Рік тому

      They are not rare words and they are used all the time. There is nothing special about those words, they are part of the fundamental vocabulary.

  • @westvirginiaglutenfreepepp7006

    Kimi ni Todoke is my favorite manga

  • @afizi1213
    @afizi1213 Рік тому

    Its easy to understand ssince learn japanese strong interest

  • @jaytriestoplay3647
    @jaytriestoplay3647 Рік тому +3

    Had a japanese 'bad boy' friend growing up so I learned certain expressions in that fashion, I realized when I'm fluent I too will probably sound a little...bad boyish lol

  • @shi_no_kurai_kage
    @shi_no_kurai_kage 4 місяці тому

    Me: WRITE THAT DOWN ×2!

  • @brosef9997
    @brosef9997 Рік тому +1

    can you do a video on gyaru??

  • @ShaniAce
    @ShaniAce Рік тому +4

    Interesting, I've often noticed this - most notably the change to -ee - in the Yakuza games as well as some anime, and I could just tell from the intonation that it was meant to come across as rougher. But I didn't know how or where it's actually formed from.

  • @nicbentulan
    @nicbentulan Рік тому +3

    2nd comment: Yuta, you have a great series of how anime characters speak Japanese. Please do Itsuki Nakano from the quintessential quintuplets or any or all the 7 main characters in TQQ.
    How they speak Japanese I believe is very important to understanding the plot eg the honorifics, the lost in translation stuff (eg when they say things like tsurui, hatsukoi, uso, tachi, fukuzatsu Vs taihen, mote etc that are removed from the dub). I compiled a lot of the lost in translation stuff in r/gotoubun
    Something to consider about Itsuki:
    The Quintessential Quintuplets' character types are:
    Ichika - Onee-san / ara ara,
    Nino - tsundere,
    miku - kuudere / dandere,
    Yotsuba - genki
    Itsuki - ??
    - Tsundere like Nino?
    - Eat-suki?
    - Imouto?
    - Someone who speaks keigo to their siblings, to Fuutarou and to Raiha and to everyone basically?
    Actually, the main thing I learned from Yuta's videos that keigo is basically just desu, masu & their variations.
    I swear when I learned elementary Japanese in bachelor's (foreign language classes are required in universities in the Philippines) we were never even taught the word keigo.
    All this time I had no idea Itsuki was the only quint and actually only main character who was talking keigo to EVERYONE.
    Anyway, I have a theory as to what Itsuki's type is, but you're not gonna like it...

  • @YamatoTre
    @YamatoTre Рік тому

    The thumbnail sent me

  • @xlodvig
    @xlodvig Рік тому +1

    おい喜多川、持ち上げんねぇよこのやろう!🤣

  • @bleromafia
    @bleromafia 5 місяців тому

    10:40 does anyone have context or a link to the video?

  • @KARINA29534
    @KARINA29534 Рік тому

    I want to speak like a Japanese bad boy

  • @kosna
    @kosna 11 місяців тому

    I knew csm and tokyo revengers would be in this 😭

  • @BlackPatriot1776
    @BlackPatriot1776 Рік тому

    Never clicked on a video so fast lol

  • @UzumakiHarutoJP
    @UzumakiHarutoJP Рік тому +3

    Doesn't the あい → ええ contraction happen in Kansai dialect too??

    • @Dankyjrthethird
      @Dankyjrthethird Рік тому +3

      Ya
      They say ええ instead of いい i think. Fascinating stuff.

    • @UzumakiHarutoJP
      @UzumakiHarutoJP Рік тому +1

      @@Dankyjrthethird 確かに

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 Рік тому +2

      Ai → ee is typical of Tokyo dialect, not of Kansai. Standard Japanese (hyōjungo or kyōtsūgo, the latter translatable as “common laguage”) is based on the Japanese spoken in the Tokyo area, but it’s a polished version of that - some features of the dialect historically used by Tokyo’s lower classes ended up being framed as characteristic of rude, hypermasculine speech in the common language.

    • @UzumakiHarutoJP
      @UzumakiHarutoJP Рік тому

      @@mattiamele3015 interesting, makes sense I guess, but it's gotta be true that people from the Kansai region at least now use it more commonly, right? A lot of my friends from that region say stuff like 下だせぇ instead of ください and じゃねぇ instead of じゃない, as well as commonly using 分かんね instead of the Tokyo dialect's 分かんない (though I've seen one use both)
      It just seems more common for people not from Tokyo to use that style of speech/text rather than people from Tokyo, even if it originally belonged to Tokyo...

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 Рік тому +1

      @@UzumakiHarutoJP I don't know, none of those are Kansai dialect expressions. Both wakannē 分かんねぇ and wakannai 分かんない are Tokyo dialect or hyōjungo, but the form in ē is kind of rude while the other is just very casual. I've never come across 下せぇ kudasē, and it sounds weird since kudasai is a polite word and the ai to ē thing is rough so it only works in non-polite language. I'm not an expert of Kansai dialect, but from what I could see the -nai in verbs typically becomes -hen: wakaranai should be wakarahen or wakarehen or just wakaran. Then, じゃねぇ is absolutely different from its Kansai-ben counterpart which is やない.

  • @Ichigoeki
    @Ichigoeki Рік тому +4

    Having learned Japanese by myself, my way of speaking is apparently a rather eclectic mix of 丁寧語、タメ口、関西便、and some archaic words that used to be common some 40-70 years ago. 😂 Gotta keep people guessing, but it at least seems to make me more approachable.

    • @metallicakixtotalass
      @metallicakixtotalass Рік тому +5

      So you sound like a stereotype of otaku who've watched a little too much of anime like monogatari.

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 Рік тому +3

      It's not 関西便 but 関西弁.

  • @faina_yevheniia
    @faina_yevheniia 4 місяці тому

    Aki speaks not like a sweat good boy😮 Oh

  • @mohammedsaad64
    @mohammedsaad64 2 місяці тому

    does anyone knows what the original video of minute 9:22

  • @user-dw7gm5fo3t
    @user-dw7gm5fo3t Рік тому

    A friend of mine used to say Sugee instead of sugoi. Know I understand why.

  • @RonLarhz
    @RonLarhz 5 місяців тому

    oh shoot. i used ka as a ? unknowingly...no wonder i didnt get further replies from japanese in one of those language apps.

  • @SuperMegaLamp
    @SuperMegaLamp Рік тому

    what about high class?

  • @mapotoffu7371
    @mapotoffu7371 Рік тому

    You have to be Jotaro Koujo 😅

  • @Fun-lm6sk
    @Fun-lm6sk 10 місяців тому

    いいビデオできやがったなコラ!

    • @mohammedsaad64
      @mohammedsaad64 2 місяці тому

      minute 9:22
      from what show is that? or the original video?

  • @shindousan
    @shindousan 8 місяців тому

    I'm curious as to why some of these forms are considered rude. Do they literally translate to something specific? Is there an etymological story behind some of them? Here in Brazil there are forms of speech associated with “underclass”, “slums” and “drug dealers”. Sometimes they are just a sign of belonging to these groups, other times the expressions actually mean something in a rude way and there are less rude synonyms.

  • @aL3891_
    @aL3891_ Рік тому

    Wait, I thought that's what you had been doing since you started the channel?

  • @uraruto
    @uraruto Місяць тому

    ありがとうござったぞなー!俺様愛したぞ

  • @GGray.
    @GGray. Рік тому +1

    Like a bad boy lmao

  • @yellowronos
    @yellowronos Рік тому

    Yo yo yo! Omaera!

  • @g3n3ral1nsanity5
    @g3n3ral1nsanity5 Рік тому

    This is good for me in case I want to have a smart mouth in a second language lol

  • @Karto69
    @Karto69 Рік тому

    why there is a "tsu" to make the letter longer?

    • @matoikazamaki9522
      @matoikazamaki9522 Рік тому +2

      It's a smaller tsu (つ -> っ) and is the interruption marker.
      はと is pronounced hato
      but はっと would be "hatto" with a small interuption before the t.

    • @Karto69
      @Karto69 Рік тому

      @@matoikazamaki9522 ありがとうございます!

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 Рік тому

      ​@@matoikazamaki9522 Did you make up the term interruption marker? It's not an interruption at all and it's not really a marker. It doesn't have a sound by itself but it's a kana (a letter, if you will) like all the others. It makes the following consonant longer (geminate). If you speak a language that uses geminate consonants, like Italian, Hungarian, Finnish or Arabic, it's really easy to get that. At the end of a word, however, it acts similarly to an interjection mark. It's unclear how it's supposed to be pronounced in that case, and it's mostly used in manga or informal writing that mimics casual speech. This particular usage of small tsu is dictated by expressive purposes rather than any phonetic reasons. It does not, anyway, lengthen the vowel before it (as opposed to ー).

    • @mattiamele3015
      @mattiamele3015 Рік тому

      ​@@Karto69 Please refer to my reply above.

    • @matoikazamaki9522
      @matoikazamaki9522 Рік тому

      @@mattiamele3015 I'm sorry, I didn't find any accurate way to name it nor to describe what it does.
      What I meant was basically that you had to "hold" the consonnant before pronouncing. Sorry if that was misleading

  • @y11971alex
    @y11971alex 7 місяців тому

    What about Mikudayo? 😮

  • @playingcasually
    @playingcasually Рік тому

    6:40 I'll subscribe, I'll subscribe, please don't hit me anymore bro!

  • @jaytriestoplay3647
    @jaytriestoplay3647 Рік тому

    Yuta is my favorite not bad boy bad boy good boy guy😂

  • @ROBOHOLIC1
    @ROBOHOLIC1 Рік тому

    I've been doing the "ai" to "ee" sounds unconsciously then. Oml. I can't pronounce certain things so I just do that out of convenience.

  • @NathanHigiers
    @NathanHigiers Рік тому

    Thanks to this video, I'm now ready to get my a*s kicked out of Japan.

  • @blackstack54
    @blackstack54 Рік тому +3

    Why did you repost the video?

    • @Alya-hq2lu
      @Alya-hq2lu Рік тому

      Same question I was gonna watch it but youtube Said that this video was set private

    • @Basement-Science
      @Basement-Science Рік тому +1

      @@Alya-hq2lu The audio was broken for all the anime clips.

    • @Alya-hq2lu
      @Alya-hq2lu Рік тому

      @@Basement-Science oh

  • @WANDERER0070
    @WANDERER0070 Рік тому

    Would it be funny if someones name was Teme or Omaj 😂

  • @ReijiArisu1211
    @ReijiArisu1211 Рік тому

    Or just play the Yakuza series.

  • @MadDogRyan
    @MadDogRyan 10 місяців тому

    Can you Explain what Uke and seme mean to the uncultured viewers

  • @sbv4mp
    @sbv4mp Рік тому

    Bro is so lucky, he can watch anime without you subtitles 💀✨

  • @beyondstar8882
    @beyondstar8882 Рік тому

    i am infatuated to japanese guys 😭😭😭 can anyone date me. im a femboy asian

  • @EvestTech
    @EvestTech Рік тому

    XD

  • @user-vb6xf7wu4s
    @user-vb6xf7wu4s 2 місяці тому

    Sugee

  • @Strelok54442
    @Strelok54442 Рік тому

    first

  • @nicbentulan
    @nicbentulan Рік тому +1

    0:13 hey cool there's anime in this video! Usually I won't watch if there isn't anime. Why don't you mention in the thumbnail or description that there's anime? I think it would entice people to watch your videos. Like someone could look up chainsaw man and then decide to check out your video even if they weren't (yet) interested in learning Japanese.
    Anyhoo ... Got back into anime late 2021 / early 2022 and started watching yuta late 2022. gained a lot of insights in just a few months but of course i had learned japanese over a decade ago when i was in university.
    now i watch yuta as regularly as i watch agadmator videos. (agadmator is a popular youtuber in 9LX. agadmator makes chess videos too, but chess suuuuucks and 9LX ruuuules.)
    P.S. Who is the biggest sore loser?
    Light Yagami (in death note)
    Magnus Carlsen (in chess)
    Garrett Adelstein (in poker)
    Magnus Carlsen (in 9LX)

    • @r_se
      @r_se Рік тому

      carlsen a biggest looser i ever seen in my life

    • @nicbentulan
      @nicbentulan Рік тому +1

      ​@@r_se GOD BLESS YOU. What's your opinion of the ZS4ZPF theory? ZS4ZPF theory says Magnus accused Hans of cheating because Hans is Jewish or American

  • @mouserr
    @mouserr Рік тому +2

    im an old white man with tattoos and a beard, im aleady unwelcome in japan for my appearance alone why would you recommend i learn something that would make the distrust and dislike even worse? dropped

    • @splorby176
      @splorby176 Рік тому +9

      The video is called “how to,” not “you must.”

  • @richardsamueljordan1569
    @richardsamueljordan1569 Рік тому

    Oh, I know another meaning to "iku"

  • @FunkyBukkyo
    @FunkyBukkyo Рік тому

    A section of this is a guide on how to speak like a chinpira

  • @Webberjo
    @Webberjo Рік тому

    This video's thumbnail is great. xD