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Lin Senpai
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Lin Senpai
@LinSenpai4
Anime Senpai from Germany🇩🇪|♀|🔞|Pjsk|Umamusume|Dbd|Ao no exorcist|Bungou stray dogs|Cat Fantasy|Anime&Manga hell| ~all ships are beautiful😘❤️~
Berlin, Deutschland Katılım Mart 2022
538 Takip Edilen123 Takipçiler
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@tanpukunokami We in Germany always say "auf Wiedersehen" which comes pretty close to it. :3
English

"Ittekimasu" doesn't mean goodbye in Japanese.
If anything, it means the opposite.
The word is made of two verbs: "itte" (go) and "kimasu" (come).
So when a Japanese person says it on the way out the door, they're not saying farewell.
They're saying "I'm going, and I'll be back."
The reply, "itterasshai," works the same way.
It means "go, and come back."
Two short promises.
One leaving, one waiting.
People don't think about this every morning, of course.
It's just something you say.
But the structure is still there, baked into the word.
Every ittekimasu has a small promise inside it: I'll be back.
Every itterasshai has a small request: please come back.
English doesn't really have an equivalent.
"See you later" is the closest, but it doesn't promise anything.
It just hopes.
So every morning in Japan, in millions of homes, people exchange tiny contracts before walking out the door.
One person leaves.
Another waits.
And both expect to meet again at the end of the day.
It's not really a goodbye.
It's a small, daily promise that today won't be the last time.

English
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Yuri had been a mother for only few hours, but no doubt she would give Rin and Yukio the world if she only had a chance 🥹🤍💙


✰@popcomes
post your favorite mother character
English
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