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You'd hate Canada.Don't buy food. It's awesomely expensive. Also imported from China. Streets are too narrow.
something for everybody.See also
* Boong-Ga Boong-Ga, a video game for the Korean and Japanese market that allows the player to engage in simulated anal probing.
Ah, reminds me of all the times such jokes were played without shame while I was in grade school in Korea
never been myself, but I speak good conversational japanese. feel free to ask questions if you need to kow any simple phrases.
"Ore wa kuso kankokujin yarou, toire wa doko desu ka"
not exact.
Fixed.Have fun. If you look don't know Japanese, you're ****ed.
shit.I actually know enough Japanese to know that the sentence means:
"I am 'kuso' Korean bastard, where is the toilet (polite tone)?"
I don't know what kuso is, though.
What do you recommend for food, or should I just expect to pay a lot for it (which is fine, I figure everything will be relatively expensive).I've been to Kyoto.
Don't buy food. It's awesomely expensive. Also imported from China. Streets are too narrow.
I'd say the nighttime is very interesting, possibly for any Japanese city. Very cyberpunk.
I will - let's start with two basics:never been myself, but I speak good conversational japanese. feel free to ask questions if you need to kow any simple phrases.
Thanks - I'll look those places up. It sounds like you spent some time there?Kyoto's indeed great. It just feels cosy and homely despite being mostly camera fodder. I hope you like temples since you'll have temples up the wazoo, but I've forgotten the names of most of the recommended ones. Just google 'Kyoto temples' and read up on which ones sound most worth visiting from among all the usual suspects like Kinkaku-ji, Byodo-in, Ryoan-ji... Most of the better known or prettier ones demand a small entrance fee, but you can find lots of decent tourist fodder just by wandering around and checking out lesser known places.
Check Higashiyama for Kiyomizu shrine, plus ye olde trad style streets & whatnot.
Gion is also a nice part of olde-Kyoto to bumble around while looking for geisha to snap, plus it's close to central Shijo street for shopping and cheeseburgers.
There's some nice scenery and a monkey park out west in Arashiyama. Nijo castle is worth a visit, I guess, then there's the old imperial palace and grounds as well as a glut of other stuff to fill up the afternoons.
Kyoto has great subway and rail networks, so you should get a map with romanised station names for easy travel between all the sightseeing spots. If you're there for two weeks, you may as well visit nearby Nara and see the deer and the big Buddha too.
Just be aware that, as with most famous tourist attractions, most of this stuff has the potential to be very underwhelming should you go there expecting to have your mind blown.
I actually know enough Japanese to know that the sentence means:
"I am 'kuso' Korean bastard, where is the toilet (polite tone)?"
I don't know what kuso is, though.
I spent a while in Japan but only a few weeks in Kyoto. Essentially, for Kyoto I just borrowed a friend's Lonely Planet guidebook and visited all the places that sounded coolest. It never let me down once, even down to details like cheap hotels. Since I was on foot and solo most of the time, travelling from site to site also allowed me to investigate the occasional curiosity or hidden gem. I never did visit Nara, though.Thanks - I'll look those places up. It sounds like you spent some time there?
What do you recommend for food, or should I just expect to pay a lot for it (which is fine, I figure everything will be relatively expensive).
Wo shi han ren wan ba dan. Ma fan ni, che shou zai na li?
Buy from one of those street vendors - the ones that look clean. Try to find one with an octopus painted on it. Most of those street vendors are good, and are quite tasty, and I'd bet you'd want to experience new exotic foods since you're a tourist.
But as for meals, I dunno.
ENGLISH, DO YOU SPEAK IT!?