I'm watching you (p_-) Currently I’m doing Japanese online school and Japanese community! Please check them out! 日本語学校と日本・日本語コミュニティをやっています! *Our website*: www.key-peace.net/# *Lesson Booking Site*: kptest.simplybook.me/v2/# *Community Discord*: discord.gg/VqE2xZRahc ↓more details New Japanese Lessons & Community ! :Key Peace kzbin.info/www/bejne/bqbTq4V7n7Bkb7s
@ykkyengec86592 жыл бұрын
Scary
@Ren_li172 жыл бұрын
گول والله 🐧💔
@vanessameow19022 жыл бұрын
😌僕は気にしないから
@user-ej3xy3zw3i2 жыл бұрын
くさどんまい!!!!!!
@seachann2 жыл бұрын
Are you in my walls ;~;?
@ClaireBear8686 Жыл бұрын
I just wanted to say: the speed at which you talk, your clear pronunciation, and you choice of words makes it so easy for even a beginner to understand you. Your channel is really useful to someone trying to learn Japanese!
@matthewgamr45462 жыл бұрын
Watching Haikyuu I would often hear "donmai". I assumed it meant telling the other person to "not mind" the mistake they made. I learned a lot from this video and thanks for always making such interesting and informative videos!
@ItsNoGoodJrGaming2 жыл бұрын
Yeah! Haikyuu was the first thing that popped into my head too
@MSinclairStevens2 жыл бұрын
私も
@ぷら-pura962 жыл бұрын
The Japanese language has many words borrowed from English. Many of them are used in ways that are far removed from their original meaning. The word "donmai" comes from "don't mind.
@whivvy2 жыл бұрын
i was just gonna jooke abt this too lmao
@Jmerzio2 жыл бұрын
@@ぷら-pura96 "Bitch" is also like that, it doesnt mean arrogant woman in japanese, it means slut.
my favorite slang that i’ve learned from watching my favorite japanese streamer is 「台パン」(daipan). you might think it’s some weird kind of bread, but it actually means when you rage-slam your desk and comes from 台 meaning your desk/table, and パン being short for パンチ or punch.
@cellu10532 жыл бұрын
_ふざけんのも、大概にSayよ!_
@melodysaber75352 жыл бұрын
Aacccckkk I've always wanted to know what 台パン meant 😭😭 thank you so much
I don't watch your videos with the subtitles in order to study more, so I really appreciate the both the level of Japanese and the clear way you speak. It's very easy to understand at a N3/N2 level.
@primopar27422 жыл бұрын
i have more of an n4 level and it's also fairly easy for me to understand most of it without subtitles
@hatsunehatsunemikumikumiku2 жыл бұрын
same its like the only thing i can understand in japanese are his lessons
@kaelart58762 жыл бұрын
Omg same!! Even I don’t understand the sentence structures completely or some words, he makes it easy to understand.
I'm very surprised that I didn't know most of the slangs you've mentioned here. I've learned a lot today, thank you and keep up the good work, Onomappu!
@neo84942 жыл бұрын
As a native Japanese speaker, your lesson was interesting, especially mentioning "donmai." it is excellent. It is often used in daily conversation compared to others. But I feel like it's certainly better to know these words, not only "donmai." Props to people who are learning this complex language, Japanese!
@ジャック-k6t2 жыл бұрын
neoの英語はプロ。プロプス。hahah
@bassoonplatoon31462 жыл бұрын
@@ジャック-k6t そうですね
@MariNate10162 жыл бұрын
And this is why speaking to natives is way more important than a book.
@impactframes65142 жыл бұрын
*stares at Genki textbook sitting on desk*
@rachel68432 жыл бұрын
ひときさんの日本語めっちゃ聞きやすくて全部理解できます😊いつもありがとうございます~
@몽쌤-s3o Жыл бұрын
너무 재밌어요 일어와 한글이 같이 보이고 들리는 발음도 너무 정확해서 많이 배워갑니다! 다음엔 일어로 댓글 쓸 날이 오길...!❤
@muscletomato2 жыл бұрын
現在日本に住んでいる在日日本人ですがとてもためになりました
@NyuAkiyama2 жыл бұрын
Please make another video like this!! We, japanese learners, need it :( I only knew one of all of them, I gotta learn more of this. I don't mind if it's a 15min video about slang xD I´d love it!
@kinkanman21342 жыл бұрын
pro tip: take 2 months to do rrtk (easy way to learn to recongnize 1000 most common kanji and their meaning) then watch anime with japanese subs and just do that a lot. now, even the words you don't know, youll instantly know the meaning or at least relative idea of the word. and obviuosly by watching anime u learn real japanese, even if they are more dramatic than usual
@NyuAkiyama2 жыл бұрын
@@kinkanman2134 what's rrtk?
@ahmedwael12022 жыл бұрын
@@kinkanman2134 what's rrtk?
@mobulafish2 жыл бұрын
Idk about rrtk but RTK (remembering the kanji) is a book by Heisig, a staging point in preparation of learning Japanese reading.
@kinkanman21342 жыл бұрын
@@mobulafish its based off of that except rrtk isnt a waste of time thats the difference lol
@TheWilsonbest9 ай бұрын
I’m just finishing my exchange trip in Japan and made a few friends. They were especially surprised when they heard “あたおか” and “それな” - their reactions were priceless. えええ?? How’d you know this. Loved the video, please think of more slang! So fun!
A little note to the ending of that phrase "もっとこんな動画を作ってくれていいですか" that "ていいですか" grammar actually means to ask for a permission and with a くれる verb its sounds a little bit off. So instead if you want not a permision for your own action, but ask for someone else's action to do it for you just say "もっとこんな動画を作ってくれませんか"
3:31 I've always seen it as saying "Don't mind" in command form, telling the person that they shouldn't mind their failure too much.
@asharce56862 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your video! 「ドンマイ」は英語的には「never mind」より「Don't mind it」のほうが当てると思います。「Don't mind it」は「ドンマイ」と同じように「気にしないで」という意味があります。実際に使っていたら、「It's okay, don't mind it. It's not a big deal.」のように、他の表現と一緒によく出てきます。 I learned a lot from your videos. Keep it up!
@ritikkala60902 жыл бұрын
Hey Onomappu, I'm really grateful to this KZbin subtitles and because of that I can understand. I really love the accent of yours.. 🤍😅 Love from India 🇮🇳🤍...
@PaperLaur2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad I stumbled on this, it's fascinating to hear about stuff like slang in other languages because it's never taught and it's so often similar across languages, mashing words together and taking words out of their original contexts to give them a different or more complex cultural meaning. I remember hearing "donmai des" in a song, but it was just translated as "don't mind it", which I suppose isn't technically wrong, but it's good to know the actual meaning and that it's a commonly used word (meaning it'd be even more mood-jarringly flippant in the context it was in)
@一級高麗人参茶2 жыл бұрын
「あーね」is also Japanese popular slang. The meaning of the word is “I see. ”.
@mesty202 жыл бұрын
「oh, I see.」 「“あー”、なるほど“ね”」 ↓ ↓ 「あー」 「ね」 「あーね」
@KO-ev7yo2 жыл бұрын
あー and ね is separated we don’t see it as a one word. あー is like “i see” and ね is express agreement. I read your comment and found it interesting, I can understand how it makes you think one word coz people use it very often.
My thought on the "Donmai" part was that it meant "Don't mind it", which doesn't imply that the person saying it does not mind, but tells the other person to not mind it or to not give it much mind. There's a big similarity with the "I don't mind", but you can tell the difference if you think about it.
@emancebo13 Жыл бұрын
Great content, thanks 🙏
@물빛사탕 Жыл бұрын
어제 알고리즘이 추천해준 계정인데 말도 또박또박 해주고 설명도 꼼꼼하게 잘 해주셔서 좋아요ㅜㅜㅠㅠㅜ 영상 자주 챙겨보러 오겠습니다😘😘
@bambinayuki2 жыл бұрын
I've been waiting for this video for a long time, thanks Hitoki
@hangchu99502 жыл бұрын
ヒトキさんは本当に面白い人すよね💕
@jaygerist Жыл бұрын
thank you for this video! I'm a 13 years old student from Malaysia trying to study Japanese and your videos help me very well! I'm looking forward to your next japanese lessons!! ありがとう!!!
@lelrond Жыл бұрын
がんばって - Boleh ^-^
@rixku33582 жыл бұрын
Thanks much for the slang vocabulary. My teacher doesn’t really teach us much slang not uses much slang when teaching us Japanese, so it’s helpful! Especially when teaching and talking with my classmates. 😊
@lynchie2073 Жыл бұрын
i really like さぶ which i learnt while i was sasayama, near osaka. it means cold! everyone i was with would be shivering and going "うわー、さぶさぶさぶ" because it was so cold
@gigiparrilla90082 жыл бұрын
This was very informative and fun! Would love to watch a part 2!
@selenity932 жыл бұрын
ありがとうございます!今日もたくさん面白言葉を習いました☺️
@With_Me_JAPAN2 жыл бұрын
Interesting choices of slangs! I use “ドタキャン“ the most. I mean I try not to use it for my appointments 😂✨
ono i like how you speak in a way that is not too fast but still natural sounding. its really helping me with my listening comprehension of the language 😊
ひときーさん、thanks for always helping me better my Japanese and learn about Japan with your videos. You have a great personality, and we'd definitely be いつメン IRL, I've got you, dude. Your subtitles always help me with learning kanji and memorizing my hiragana/katakana, and with the direct English translations it helps tremendously. Keep up the good work!! 本当にありがとうひときーさんあなたのビデオのために!!
@kokoo242 Жыл бұрын
本当に有用な映像 !
@rhiannn34162 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this! I've heard どんまい, それな, まじで草 and ポチる (but I didn't know what ポチる meant lol) before from my friends, but the others were all new to me. Also thanks for always speaking in a way that's so easy to understand! My friends speak in 大阪弁 and they speak pretty fast too so I often end up needing them to repeat a word because they mumble or shorten some words together and I can't quite catch what they're saying. I've definitely gotten better, I was a whole mess at first because I wasn't used to the dialect at all or any slang so I was so just in a state of confusion the entire time. TL;DR: Watching your videos are a whole breath of fresh air because I am reminded I am not totally hopeless at Japanese.
@redfield71062 жыл бұрын
Based on this video, ポチる should means clicking/to click (like clicking an internet link/button) It comes from the onomatopeia sounds of clicking ポチ(pochi) and making it into a -ru(る) verbs. Notice that the pochi ポチ is in katakana while the る is in hiragana. The logic of adding the -ru(る) there is equivalent to adding -ing to any english words (like Ubering which means doing Uber drive)
@turrellianerrysdelrynn33162 жыл бұрын
@@redfield7106 I saw you clearing things up on another comment too. You’re so helpful, thank you!
Your way of teaching is just so wonderful, especially when you are explaining the word "donmai". I can learn a lots after your video, it isn't just teaching new things, but it also make me laugh by your actions, and Have a Nice Day!
@üöä-u5c2 жыл бұрын
説明がすごく上手で、最後まで聞きこんでしまいました! 小ボケがふんだんに使われててマジ草
@haruto27962 жыл бұрын
I’m Japanese, but I didn’t expect that we use so many slang words in usual conversation. Thanks for making me realize!
@HAMAI-gb8hb2 жыл бұрын
勉強になりました。ありがとございます😇
@slateofblack67972 жыл бұрын
Very informative, my ears are slowly getting used to Japanese as I watch your videos, big fan of your bright and passionate personality
日本人として、日本語を学んでいる海外の方々がいらっしゃるというのはとっても嬉しいです😉 As a Japanese, I'm very glad that there are many people from different countries studying Japanese!
@darknessbroadcast41392 жыл бұрын
え?なぜ 奇妙すぎる 究極のナショナリストだねあなた
@kuraazyododo69802 жыл бұрын
@@darknessbroadcast4139 日本人は、日本語なんて学ぶ人は少ないと思う人も多いので、基本的に日本語を学ぶ人がいるということにありがたく感じるんですよね。 日本人としてはかなり普通のことですね。これも日本の文化の一つだと思います。 Many Japanese feel very glad that there are many people from different countries studying Japanese because Japanese are thinking that there are only a few people who want to learn Japanese. It is quite normal for Japanese. I think that it's one of the Japanese culture.
@@tobeflyhigh 日本が他の国の方から興味を持ってもらっているということを知らない日本人は多いと思いますね。 私はナショナリストではないのですが、それでも日本の文化が好きと言っていただけると、うれしい気持ちになります。 I think a lot of Japanese people don't know that many people from other countries are interested in Japanese culture. I'm not a nationalist but I'm happy when people from other countries say they like Japan.
@사탕수수2 жыл бұрын
日本語の勉強中ですが映像が面白くて発音も良くて役に立つと思います。 ありがとうございます!
@ライラ-f6s2 жыл бұрын
Her video encourages me to continue learning Japanese 彼女のビデオは私が日本語を学び続けることを奨励しています
@SeraYagami2 жыл бұрын
めっちゃ面白くて草。どんまい、良いビデオだったってこと。ありがとう!🙏🙏🙏
@busegulberk48612 жыл бұрын
Türkçe altyazıları kim hazırlıyorsa ona bütün Türkçe altyazılı izleyenler adına teşekkür etmek istiyorum, hem Japonca hem Türkçe altyazı hazırlamak zor olmalı, üstünde çok uğraşıldığı belli oluyor gerçekten. 💗💗
@Onomappu2 жыл бұрын
ありがとう☺️
@christophermoore6110 Жыл бұрын
すごい!この動画はすっごく勉強になりました!
@albertiuscn71792 жыл бұрын
What a great content! I knew some Japanese slang too, like "gachi" which almost the same as "maji". "Azasu" is "arigatou gozaimasu" but in shorter and informal form Please correct me if I wrong, thanks ^^
@lovepop58242 жыл бұрын
私は「ガチ」は「Seriously」の意味で使うことが多いです!
@at72262 жыл бұрын
ちなみに、ガチ(gachi)よりマジ(maji)の方が、よく使われている気がします🤔!
@DistrarSubvoyikar Жыл бұрын
When i see "gachi', i think of "gachigachi" (ガチガチ) meaning "stiff", lol
@georgiafitzpatrick3786 Жыл бұрын
ahhhh this video is so wholesome!!! Love you work オノマップ先生!Thanks for so many great vids :D
I unintentionally watched your video without subtitles, and I was surprised at how much I was able to follow you. It's uplifting and lets me know I'm not as bad as I think :) This is my first video of yours btw, subbed.
@gillesfrancois5277 Жыл бұрын
So cute and funny video! Thank you, man! I glad to waching your channel!:)
@sinimeg2 жыл бұрын
We’re itsumen because we’re always here to see your videos, so it’s similar enough xD
@varshaarutprabham.v60812 жыл бұрын
This video was so interesting! Thank you so much for making this ❤
@TokyoTigger2 жыл бұрын
ひときさん、この動画ありがとうございます! 私は東京育ちなんですけど、ここ22年アメリカに住んでるので最近のスラングはあまり知りません。時々新しいアニメで分からないのを聞いた度、え、どこで調べりゃいいの∼って思います。 "ドンマイ" は確かに "don't mind" の略です。アメリカでは話相手に対して使わないですが、イギリスなどの言語文化では、"mind" は "worry, care, give attention" の意味で "pay it no mind, don't mind it" は "don't worry about it, don't give it any attention" となります。アメリカでは、ドンマイは "don't worry about it, don't let it get you down, there's always next time" などの訳が一番当ってると思います! それと、「草」のスラングとしての意味がよく分かりません。"Grass/herb" なのは分かりますが、スラングのコンテキストがはてなです。もう少し説明お願いできますか?
@あぜると2 жыл бұрын
草= lol, lmao It comes from “w” which is an abbreviation of 笑(わら). When strung together like “wwwwwww”, it looks like a field of grass, hence 草
@TokyoTigger2 жыл бұрын
@@あぜると あ∼なるほど! That makes sense. It's such a uniquely digital/social media term. Thank you for the explanation!
@Luv-dq5th Жыл бұрын
I like the way you talk. Seems very easy to understand for someone attempting to learn the language, not too fast, not too slurred
@scmarshtacky2 жыл бұрын
I don't consider my Japanese great by any means, and it's amazing how well your videos are presented such that I can understand with my limited vocabulary and enjoy a couple good laughs. ありがとうございます。
@TRANG-NGUYEN-18062 жыл бұрын
とても聞くのが好きです👂動画がたくさん作ってありがとう
@XCanG2 жыл бұрын
I didn't have subs enabled on my language, it was japanese subs, but I still keep listening and I'm sure about 75% of it I get right, especially hand gestures, mimic and images make it easy to spot on what is you talking about. For the last, about myself: I mostly know japanese from decades of watching anime (with original VA) and manga. Which make me slowly, but continuously learn this language. But I didn't study it on purpose. Most weak my part is reading anything beside hiragana (still take mistakes in katakana and reading kanji by guess is just not make sense and very hard).
@davidhume69932 жыл бұрын
教えてくれてありがとうございます!
@Vickyalexa23032 жыл бұрын
Amo tus videos ✨
@drkidleader755 Жыл бұрын
Hey bro! was perfect, hope I will come up with those answers this November on my first trip to Japan
@gristen2 жыл бұрын
どんまい is used the same way in english sometimes! if someone messes up you can tell them "don't mind it!" or "don't pay it any mind" when you "mind" something, it means something is making you unhappy or worried. saying "don't mind it" means don't worry about something
@gristen2 жыл бұрын
"pay it no mind" is another way to say "don't mind it"
@chiba_tsuparri2 жыл бұрын
wow thank you so much, this is helping me!
@MrMikeInverse2 жыл бұрын
This video was awesome, the context も、but your attitude was so uplifting and positive. 👏👏👏 Big like. Hmm the slang I know is 豆腐メンタル and 幸せ太り。😂
@中国-t3k2 жыл бұрын
wow I could understand ur japanese easily without subtitle because ur japanese is very simple
@scout81452 жыл бұрын
At least in the US, it’s OK to say “hey, bro” to a very casual, friendly professor! So don’t worry, you were probably fine. :) Also, I know the slang word “yabai,” but I don’t know how it’s written. It seems like it can mean lots of different things, like “oh dang” or “improper” or “this is bad.” I know it also means “dangerous” as a non-slang word!
@brombrombromley2 жыл бұрын
やばい is kinda like saying something is crazy or insane in english where it can go either way afaik
@Shawarma1012 жыл бұрын
Kind of a mixture of “Crazy” and “bad” you use it to describe a situation (in some cases a thing but I can’t think of an example) , for example you forgot to write smth in your exam so you blurt this out, out of realization. Sorry, I am not very good at explaining, this can also be used to describe a good situation for example you got 7 super rare chars in a game so you blurt this out multiple times in excitement
@Jambobist2 жыл бұрын
Yeah 'hey bro' is fine in that context, professor was already using casual language. Though being in the UK 'alright mate' would be better :)
I think "ドンマイ" is more from "don't mind it" instead of "i don't mind". Because "don't mind it" fits the context with how you use it (気にしないで). Anyways, great video! I'm still learning Japanese and being able to understand most of what you said without the subtitle felt very gratifying (thanks to your clear pronunciation and easier vocabulary).
"hey bro" is a perfectly acceptable casual response to the casual greeting "whats up"
@orozcocarmonamariafernanda09142 жыл бұрын
ひときさん!Thank you for helping those of us who are learning Japanese to better understand some things that we are not taught in books lol. I remember hearing the word 「ドンマイ」 in a song, at first I didn't understand its meaning but I think now I understand more clearly what it said in that part of the song. It's great to learn new things 😊✨
@CA-zl6xo2 жыл бұрын
ドンマイケルジョーダン
@トシゾウ-y3n2 жыл бұрын
勉強中の方が聞き取りやすいように話してるのが伝わります!素晴らしい動画😁
@ivy_yati34812 жыл бұрын
Been waiting for your videos 😊😊 I feel like it’s have been sooo long that you don’t upload 😁 I watch your videos and I don’t need to practice listening for my JLPT test So thx u❣️ If u don’t mind can u make a videos about university in Japan cause going to university in Japan is one of my dream and I am been working on it now So if u make videos about it will really mean a lot to me 🥰🥰 Sorry if my comment is too long😅😅
@rita_youtube_2 жыл бұрын
まじ、えぐい、やばい、がち この四天王で若者同士は会話できます。
@wiktoria71572 жыл бұрын
Uwielbiam Twoje filmiki! Kiedy słucham Twoich słów, bardzo dużo rozumiem bez napisów, a tych co nie potrafię, od razu zapisuje i się uczę. ありがとうございます。 次の動画を待ってる 。