[[Ayame]] wrote:Oyasumi, minna-san. T_T
Mikeru-san: T___T
Night, Aya-san!
Yeah, a lot of people shed tears because I'm always "busy." Well, I shouldn't say busy, but rather, I always have something I need to do, or would rather work on.
Ninja Ai wrote:I'm New Guinea-Irish, don't hate Mika-san. I'm not white. (but I am pale) :u (jealous!) It's totally unfair when Asians or Thai people use theirs, they have cute honorifics.... But I still dislike them no matter what language. =p
I'm not hating, but I'm aware that different cultures feel differently about these things. Since I've never heard of Asians disliking honorifics before, simply because we're used to it and were raised up that way, I could see how Caucasians, who don't really have it as much in their culture, would mind. Somehow, "Mr." and "ma'am" seem more stiff to me than what Thai people use, since a lot of us young ones refer to each other as brothers, or uncles, and the like.
Just a culture thing. My brothers always use "big brother" with my name when they're trying to get something from me, and my mom uses a really casual... uh, prefix, for my name (would've been insulting to use if it wasn't from close friends or family, but indifferent or even playful, otherwise.)