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Posted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 7:20 am
I have noticed that some of the Japanese letters (such as za, ba, ga, pa, etc.) might look like the same letters as their original state (such as sa, ta, ka, etc.). This is why for teachers, it is important to write the Romanji of the words your teaching! The computer is a useful tool but it also has some flaws when it comes to typing in certain Languages. Please make sure you write the Romanji with your lesson!
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Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 3:13 pm
well, the letters ざ、ば、が、ぱ we cant see the diff if they are on the normal size, well, what harm would it be if we could just make it big right??
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Posted: Fri Nov 20, 2009 10:30 pm
iichocoiijhenii well, the letters ざ、ば、が、ぱ we cant see the diff if they are on the normal size, well, what harm would it be if we could just make it big right?? how do you write the letters on the cpu?
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Posted: Sat Nov 21, 2009 8:08 pm
iBrBz I have noticed that some of the Japanese letters (such as za, ba, ga, pa, etc.) might look like the same letters as their original state (such as sa, ta, ka, etc.). This is why for teachers, it is important to write the Romanji of the words your teaching! The computer is a useful tool but it also has some flaws when it comes to typing in certain Languages. Please make sure you write the Romanji with your lesson! the " on the symbols are Tenten. ;D they give the symbols their different sounds.
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Posted: Sat Nov 21, 2009 9:42 pm
Hitsugaya of squad10 iichocoiijhenii well, the letters ざ、ば、が、ぱ we cant see the diff if they are on the normal size, well, what harm would it be if we could just make it big right?? how do you write the letters on the cpu? oh, theres a special keyboard i think, cause, its like that with me
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Posted: Fri Nov 27, 2009 5:03 pm
iichocoiijhenii Hitsugaya of squad10 iichocoiijhenii well, the letters ざ、ば、が、ぱ we cant see the diff if they are on the normal size, well, what harm would it be if we could just make it big right?? how do you write the letters on the cpu? oh, theres a special keyboard i think, cause, its like that with me Under Windows XP, go to Start>Control Panel>Regional and Language Options>Languages Check both check boxes, and if you have to insert your XP disk (even a boot-leg will work), do that now. Allow all of the language files to install, then click on 'Details...' Under the 'Tools' tab, click on 'Add...' Select Japanese as your input language and your keyboard layout, and click 'OK' Under 'Preferences', click on 'Language Bar...' Check the first, third, and fourth check boxes, and press 'OK' You can now switch languages, keyboard formats, and input formats on the fly by clicking the icon that says either 'EN' or 'JP' on your taskbar If you use Katakana (under 'Input Mode' on the 'JP', it will allow you to type in stuff like 'de-gozaru', and have it come out as ' デーゴザル' (half-width), or ' デーゴザル' (full-width) Hiragana, however, you will have to memorize the keyboard format for Hiragana keyboards, like those used by our sensei's. I would suggest putting the characters on the keys, along with the direct-input meaning that you would type with, so you can type easily with Hiragana. Direct-input mode just lets you type normally. 'de-gozaru' is 'de-gozaru' EDIT: Hiragana Keyboard is right here.
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Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2009 8:31 am
So people litsen to her and go to topic for teachers only to disscuss this matter i am teacher in real life and on here i live in japan in seoul i think thats how you spell it any ways if your a teacher and if someone asks you to teach them add them as freind and if any one here wants to teach someone serch user with the name soma the dark lord he wants to be tought
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Posted: Sun Dec 06, 2009 8:49 pm
fenyxofshadows Under Windows XP, go to Start>Control Panel>Regional and Language Options>Languages Check both check boxes, and if you have to insert your XP disk (even a boot-leg will work), do that now. Allow all of the language files to install, then click on 'Details...' Under the 'Tools' tab, click on 'Add...' Select Japanese as your input language and your keyboard layout, and click 'OK' Under 'Preferences', click on 'Language Bar...' Check the first, third, and fourth check boxes, and press 'OK' You can now switch languages, keyboard formats, and input formats on the fly by clicking the icon that says either 'EN' or 'JP' on your taskbar If you use Katakana (under 'Input Mode' on the 'JP', it will allow you to type in stuff like 'de-gozaru', and have it come out as ' デーゴザル' (half-width), or ' デーゴザル' (full-width) Hiragana, however, you will have to memorize the keyboard format for Hiragana keyboards, like those used by our sensei's. I would suggest putting the characters on the keys, along with the direct-input meaning that you would type with, so you can type easily with Hiragana. Direct-input mode just lets you type normally. 'de-gozaru' is 'de-gozaru' EDIT: Hiragana Keyboard is right here. Your link is a 403 Forbidden error. Quote: Forbidden You don't have permission to access /images/9/97/JIS_keyboard.png on this server. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Apache/2.2.3 (Red Hat) Server at heroeswiki.com Port 80
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