And I still want to hug Desu-chan. She's adorable.
Because it was an overly simplistic diagram with no labels and therefore invited misreading. Honestly, looking at it, I can only see "cock and balls" for the fourth musician, so the fact that she got the whole "musician" part right at all is pretty good.
Because it was an overly simplistic diagram with no labels and therefore invited misreading. Honestly, looking at it, I can only see "cock and balls" for the fourth musician, so the fact that she got the whole "musician" part right at all is pretty good.
Between the name and the diagram, Bismarck had enough information to look up both what Hinamatsuri was as well as how to set up the puchis. She could've asked anyone else there for more details or looked it up online as they're not in the dark ages. The fault lies solely on her - the other girls followed her instructions.
That is one way of interpreting a word (Hinamatsuri) that I could not think is possible.
As mentioned above, Kongoh-chan is adorable and I think of hugging her as well.
Bird? The kanji for /hina/ in /hina matsuri/ is also the kanji for /hiyoko/ 'young bird/chick' - you just practically never use kanji for it - but if Bismarck looked it up in a kanji dictionary, that's one of the definitions of 雛And yet, I got through it anyway!Japanese cryptography certainly is incredible!
This was really hard to decode!
That's my Schwester Bismarck!Japanese tradition is difficult...
Puchi 889 Little Miss Overthinker
That's my Schwester Bismarck, yes!Why is it "pitchfork" and "clean up"...?Is what it looks like happened...I'll get the tree ready!Tree?HINA ・ MA ・ TSUREE!the English 'tree' /triː/ is pronouned as /tsuri/ if you write it in katakanaEveryone, I'd like you to prepare some young bird costumes and things to write on!That's fine!
You can praise me more!So what is the "ma"...?Children garbed as "Hina" dolls decorate a tree—that would be...Perhaps from now on, we should make Bismarck's name "Bis - mar - ku", then...?