Yanki's have little to do with America. I doubt many Americans wear what Yankees wear, and none of them have as awesome of hair.
Yanki's have little to do with America. I doubt many Americans wear what Yankees wear, and none of them have as awesome of hair.
A lot of my friends were "yankees" growing up. If you had a working class upbringing, then you were probably brought up in this fashion. Like all other societies, the rest of society for the most part look down on working class fashion.
Hmmm... if that is the case, then this is strange.
I love Dragon Quest, and I hate this.
Ahh the Internet and religion.
The two Aladdin games for SNES and Genesis is the rare (only?) time when two different games came out for both systems, and they were both incredibly awesome in their own ways.
Cool. I think with industry brands all it took was one guy to make one decision for either a random reason or a calculated one. With normal words I see it being so chaotic to look random.
Cool! Good to know!
I was definitely doing it wrong, but that's the thing, I could do it wrong, and it worked.
This may sound like a strange question, but how difficult do you think the Japanese is in this game Richard? Let's say I found DQIX or Radiant Historia easy to understand, MGS too difficult, and something to struggle through.
My comment would've looked better if two other people hadn't replied before me saying the same thing. I'd love a feature that avoids that happening.
Two things to help you out:
Do you think they realize that the gameplay is shit in VIII and IX, and just put up with it because they love the story that much?
Honestly, I don't get the article. However, it is about RC3 suing for the rights to make the game. I didn't know one could do such a thing, but I would assume (from the headline) they are suing Bieber (or his team/company/whatever) for the rights to do so.
Did you read the article?
urfe's comment process
I bet they always want the course in Mario Kart 7 where you can take a long short-cut, those bastards!
For the second point, I should apologize for assuming you did see it.
Usually accents aren't for specific words, but sounds. Since Australians have the sound "ay" (it may be slightly different), one has to wonder how the sound changed from "ay" (actually "e" from Japanese) into "ee".
Just to confirm, the a is like the a in "arm" as opposed to the a in "mare".