カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう
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カイナじゃのう
@kvennar
tfw you realized that IT'S ALL IN YOUR HEAD. I love my dysfunctional brain, but life has been giving me migraines. AAAAA powered. ♻️🤖💬⚛️♠️
Inner World 参加日 Ekim 2012
780 フォロー中82 フォロワー
カイナじゃのう がリツイート

That ain't no nerf??
Spideraxe@Spideraxe30
Hubris nerf: - AD reduced from 60 to 55 - AD per stack increased from 2 to 3
English
カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう がリツイート

カイナじゃのう がリツイート

カイナじゃのう がリツイート

カイナじゃのう がリツイート

カイナじゃのう がリツイート

カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう がリツイート
カイナじゃのう がリツイート

You won't believe this, but in Japan,
when you're "invited" to a wedding, you bring ¥30,000 (about $200) in cash.
The bills must be brand new. Wrinkled bills are considered rude.
You buy a special envelope called a goshūgi-bukuro. A regular envelope is offensive.
You write your name on it with a brush pen. Ballpoint pens are disrespectful.
The amount must be an odd number. Even numbers mean "splitting apart."
But ¥40,000 is forbidden. "4" sounds like the word for "death."
¥80,000 is fine though. "8" represents good fortune.
Even the knot on the envelope matters. It must be one that cannot be untied — any other knot suggests divorce.
There's a Japanese word: "goshūgi."
It means cash you pay to attend someone's wedding.
Imagine if your friend's wedding came with terms and conditions.
Welcome to Japan.

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