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#hineji
kayoquito · 2 years
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桜の上の姫路城天守閣。 動物園内の観覧車からの眺め。 "Tenshu "(la torre principal de castillo) dell Castillo de Himeji sobre cerezos en flor. Se puede disfrutar este paisaje desde la pequeña noria que está dentro del Zoológico de Himej #himejicastle #hineji #cherryblossom #桜 #花見 #ソメイヨシノ #観覧車からの景色 #世界の絶景 #世界遺産 ##国宝 #nationaltreasure #worldheritage #guiaturistico #visitjapanes #visitjapan #castle #japanesecastle #landscape #jaoaneselandscape #日本の風景 #春 #primavera #hyogo #兵庫 #城 (姫路市立動物園) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cb0R4TwvxQE/?utm_medium=tumblr
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vodkys · 6 years
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Hi here is ur daily reminder that Naruto and Hinata respected Neji so much that they paid tribute to him by naming their first kid Boruto (Bolt, whereas Neji means “Screw”)
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gingudeayaneco · 6 years
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Himeji Castle Cokkies (*´ω`*)
#himejicastle #cokkie #souvenir
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dailyconlang-blog · 7 years
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January 11 - およえじり!
おづめらしひねじで! Odzumerashihinejide! black_ice-look-watch_out-INCH Watch out for black ice!
おづめらし : odzumerashi [od͡zɯmɛɾäɕi] : black ice This word is a compound formed from おづ (odzu, ice) and めらし (merashi, invisible), which is derived from あし (ashi, to see passively).
えじ (eji) is a verb I came up with today to mean to watch out or be alert for something bad. It is always transitive, with the thing being watched out for as the direct object.
えじ can be used on its own, as in the title for this post (およえじり/Oyoejiri = Watch out! which uses the antipassive およ to avoid specifying what you need to watch out for) but can also combine with any of the active verbs of perception to describe how you need to watch out.
ひねじ : hineji : watch out by looking ごべえじ : gobēji : watch out by feeling on your skin (i.e. for something hot) にらえじ : niraeji : watch out by tasting (i.e. for something spicy) etc.
When えじ is used as an imperative, it may take either the non-past perfective aspect (to warn against a single, one-time threat) or the inchoative aspect (if the bad thing is ongoing and you'll have to continually be alert for a while). I decided that black ice is the second type, because you have to be careful as long as you're walking or driving around outside and it may be on the ground.
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