Halp anyone..?

May 21, 2009 16:56

I had a ridiculous idea to make an info page of every single Hetalia-character, containing the basic info such as name, age, relatives, personality, history, strenghts and weaknesses. So far, I've managed to make one of Estonia, and I've done some process with Finland, too. What I'd appreciate is that I'd get some help from you guys, since I'm ( Read more... )

aph

Leave a comment

(The comment has been removed)

sonchin June 3 2009, 17:02:25 UTC
YES, it helps, thank you so much for your effort!

*Handing the promised love in a carton box*

Reply

1cheezymonkey June 3 2009, 17:19:09 UTC
If you wanna know how to say "I love you", this site has a lot of different languages~ Although for some languages there are multiple ways of saying it, so you might want to ask somebody who is fluent in that language for the "standard" one.

http://www.omniglot.com/language/phrases/iloveyou.htm

For Japanese...(they put way too much;;) you can just go with 大好きです (daisuki desu) or 愛してる(よ) (aishiteru (yo)). [The 'yo' is optional, really]

Reply

1cheezymonkey June 3 2009, 17:19:31 UTC
oops replied to a comment, my bad orz

Reply

sonchin June 3 2009, 17:57:20 UTC
oh, nice~
thanks for the link!

Reply

kenichi_bokushi June 3 2009, 17:26:44 UTC
Japanese:
Hello depends on the time of day and setting.
Morning (good morning): おかようございます ohayou gozaimasu (おはよう ohayou is informal)
Daytime: こんにちは konnichi wa
Evening: こんばんは konban wa
Over the phone (any time of day): もしもし moshi moshi

How's it going?
お元気ですか o-genki desu ka (元気? genki? is informal)

Good-bye depends on duration.
For short durations (informal): じゃね ja ne
Or: またあとで mata ato de
More formal: ではまたあとで de wa mata ato de
For long durations: さようなら sayounara (occasionally written さよなら sayonara)
When leaving your own home: いってきます itte kimasu (literally meaning "I'll go and then come [back]"), the response to which is いってらっしゃい itterasshai

Reply

sonchin June 3 2009, 18:01:50 UTC
Thank you so much!

Reply

kenichi_bokushi June 8 2009, 07:27:36 UTC
You're welcome.

Reply

kuraddohikari June 5 2009, 07:57:20 UTC
Russia: Ya tabya lyublyu - Я тебя люблю - I love you ( ... )

Reply

kuraddohikari June 5 2009, 07:57:54 UTC
Name: Sadiq Adnan (Turkey)
Relatives: ?
personality: Talks a lot, likes to smoke hookahs, collect tulips, eat his delicious desserts (he has a sweet tooth) (dondurma, ashure, Turkish delight)
History: (I don't know much about Turkish/Ottoman history, tbh, but I'm sure it's way too much to get in to in a lj post o_O; ) They've hated Russia for centuries now... a lot (look for 'russo-turkish war' or 'crimean war' on wikipedia) Also, I would say he enjoys invading other countries' vital regions. :DDD
strengths: tourism, desserts, military
weaknesses: many enemies, ... (this is hard 'cause I like Turkey ;o; )

okay, I typed a lot, and I'm kinda tired now.. x'DD so that's all for today~!

Reply

sonchin June 5 2009, 08:53:02 UTC
You. You are an angel, thank you so much <33
I have to say: I really knew nothing about Turkey, thanks for this info here :D

Also, I would say he enjoys invading other countries' vital regions. :DDD <-- Reminds me of certain someone.. >:D

Reply

kuraddohikari June 5 2009, 22:25:31 UTC
Ehe, thanks~ xD
uhmm, there's a typo in the Russian: Ya tebya lyublyu* (not tabya)

Uhm.. I can add a little more, too~ (I like showing off mah knowledge, so I dunt mind >D)
I say he likes collecting tulips because it's not only the national flower of Turkey but also because of the Tulip Period (1718-1730), in which nobles would collect tulips as tulips represent wealth, prestige, etc. This eventually led to florists raising the prices of flowers.
Taken from Wikipedia:
Anti-tulip RebellionTulip prices began to rise in the last decades of the seventeenth century and peaked in 1726-1727 before state intervention. This reflected the demand for the inflated value of the rare bulbs and escalating demands for flowers in the elite’s palaces and gardens ( ... )

Reply

kuraddohikari June 5 2009, 22:29:07 UTC
Actually, here, about Turkey not acknowledging Poland:
"Turkey was the only country in the world that opposed and never acknowledged
the partitions of Poland. Allegedly (I'm not sure if it's true or just a legend) Turkish
sultans, during those 123 years (1795-1918), during their annual meetings with foreign
diplomats asked "Did the envoys from Lechistan arrive?", driving the Prussian, Austrian
and Russian diplomats mad"
Someone else wrote that, but I think they did a much better job explaining. xD
Lechistan = an affectionate Turkish word for Poland

Reply

sonchin June 6 2009, 09:48:27 UTC
I should propably put your name in the Turkey's page :D
How do you know all these stuff?

Reply

kuraddohikari June 6 2009, 16:28:31 UTC
xD You don't have to~
I know either from school, or, honestly, Hetalia fandom. x'D ('cause I love both Turkey's kyara and history)
... in fact I probably learn most of my history from fandom. xDDD

Reply


Leave a comment

Up