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What does it mean to be bitter at night in Japanese?

Please take care of yourself.

At first, it was a word coined by Japanese mobs as a slogan. The four words respectively represent the pseudonym "Romaji Yoroshiku", which is gradually used by Japanese young people.

Japanese official language:

Japanese, also known as Japanese (にほんご), is the official language of Japan, with 6.5438+25 million native speakers and 654.38+0.6% of the world population using Japanese.

The origin of Japanese has been debated endlessly. Japanese in Meiji era classified Japanese as Altaic language family, which has been generally denied. Homer Hulbeart and Ohno Jin think Japanese belongs to Dravidian language family, Nishida Takashi thinks Japanese belongs to Sino-Tibetan language family, and Christopher I. Beckwith thinks Japanese belongs to Japanese-Koguryo language family (that is, Fuyu language family).

Leon Angelo Serafim believes that Japanese and Ryukyu can form a Japanese language family. There is a hypothesis that Austronesian languages, Zhuang-Dong languages and Japanese languages can form Austronesian languages, that is, they are all homologous.

Chinese characters were not used in ancient Japan. When Emperor Shen Ying arrived, Chinese characters were introduced to Japan from Baekje. The Japanese secretary, who wrote entirely in Chinese characters, said: "There were no words in ancient times, and it was passed down from mouth to mouth." During the reign of Emperor Shen Ying (270-3 10), Baekje sent Akiki to Japan.

In 285, Wang Ren, a Baekje doctor in the period of King Xiaogu, brought China's Analects of Confucius, Thousand-character Works and Filial Piety to Japan, which was the beginning of Japanese exposure to Chinese characters. After the Three Kingdoms period, Chinese characters and China culture were formally introduced into Japan in large quantities.

In the Tang Dynasty, I invented a pseudonym popular among women, and the official language was classical Chinese, so modern Japanese was greatly influenced by ancient Chinese.

Take Showa 3 1 (1956) as an example. In Japanese vocabulary, Japanese accounts for 36.6% and Chinese accounts for 53.6%. In the 39th year of Showa (1964), the National Institute of Japan conducted a survey on 90 magazine terms and obtained Japanese.