Activity for Razetime
Type | On... | Excerpt | Status | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Comment | Post #279224 |
might be better to simply link it here at the top. (more) |
— | over 2 years ago |
Edit | Post #285738 | Initial revision | — | almost 3 years ago |
Answer | — |
A: Why did the letter K survive in Latin, though it was rarely used? Note: I am not an expert on Latin and I do not understand Latin. This answer is written purely from online research. Using Latin dictionary (39k+ Latin words) and leafing through each of the word pages and checking for matches with explicitly written Ks (regular expression `.+k.+ (adj|n|v|adv)`): ... (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Edit | Post #279224 |
Post edited: |
— | almost 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #279224 |
Post edited: |
— | almost 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #279224 |
Post edited: |
— | about 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #279224 |
Post edited: |
— | about 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #279224 |
Post edited: |
— | about 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #279244 | Initial revision | — | about 4 years ago |
Answer | — |
A: Who should the temporary moderators be? I nominate Moshi, since they are an active member, and consistently post well written questions and answers to this forum. I think they will be a good fit for the moderator role. (more) |
— | about 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #279224 | Initial revision | — | about 4 years ago |
Article | — |
Japanese Learning Resources I was creating a list of online Japanese learning resources on Notion, so I figured I'd put it here as well for everyone's convenience. This will be updated as I find more resources. Feel free to suggest any websites you know as well. JLPT oriented material - Marshall Yin's Website - a fully... (more) |
— | about 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #278652 |
Post edited: |
— | about 4 years ago |
Comment | Post #278652 |
@Moshi ~ないです is not mentioned on the page. Anyway, I modified the answer. (more) |
— | about 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #278652 |
Post edited: |
— | about 4 years ago |
Edit | Post #278652 | Initial revision | — | about 4 years ago |
Answer | — |
A: ~ません versus ~ないです From Steve Wright on Quora, > you can turn an entire phrase or sentence into a noun, and this has an unspoken effect, when suffixed with ~です, of adding up to the message, “I’m explaining this to you.” But rather than being condescending, it’s (often) more like, “Well, you see, this is the case.” ... (more) |
— | about 4 years ago |