Just a little help with some terms plox?
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so in the 4 years i've used fakku i have been wondering what the difference in Tan and Chan is? Do they apply to the same situations or what? never bothered to look it up or ask till now o3o
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Usually when i read tsun doujins i see Tan as a prefix where i would expect it to be chan im not a forum person sorry if i sound stupid
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You know, there's this new thing called Google, you type shit in and it can find stuff from all over the internet to answer your question and not waste our time (I know, crazy right).
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yea i know, i guess you could say this is troll bait :| idk was just wondering anyways i guess someone should go ahead and lock this thread
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animefreak_usa
Child of Samael
Tan and chan are the same thing except tan usually is use has an asexual replacement of chan and kun. You use it with people you know mostly. Child mispronunciation of Chan (ã¡ã‚ƒã‚“), an informal, intimate, and diminutive honorific suffix for a person used for friends And family
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Rydokou-Engelvonttoten wrote...
yea i know, i guess you could say this is troll bait :| idk was just wondering anyways i guess someone should go ahead and lock this thread
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1st post in IB. You're gonna have a hard time here. Go here first.
OT: Tan and Chan are titles like Mrs. or Miss except they're attached at the end of the name.
OT: Tan and Chan are titles like Mrs. or Miss except they're attached at the end of the name.
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artcellrox
The Grey Knight :y
Wikipedia wrote...
Baby talk variationsSome honorifics have baby talk versions—mispronunciations stereotypically associated with small children and cuteness. The baby talk version of sama is chama (ã¡ã‚ƒã¾?), for example, and in fact chan was a baby talk version of san that eventually became regarded as an ordinary honorific.
There are even baby talk versions of baby talk versions. Chan can be changed to tan (ãŸã‚“?), and less often, chama (ã¡ã‚ƒã¾?) to tama (ãŸã¾?). These are popularly used in the names of moe anthropomorphisms, in which a cute female, or less often, male character represents an object, concept, or popular consumer product. Well-known examples include the OS-tan operating system anthropomorphisms, charcoal mascot BinchÅ-tan.