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Originally Posted by Spanishman
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I already knew Spanish when I studied Japanese. When I first learned の, I learned it as the reverse of "de": "A de B" is the same thing as "BのA." Of course, there are other uses of both, but they overlap in at least one way. Here, it means "of."
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By the way, in my right arm I have already a tattoo with the meaning (I hope it ) from my first son. Can you say me if it will mean somethink??
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It looks a bit like "Always king" or "consistently king" to me.
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And finnaly, KyleGoetz, this Kanji > アヘル did it have some meaning???
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It is not kanji.
Kanji - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It is katakana.
Katakana - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It only has one meaning: "the sounds Aheru" (Axel if the x=Spanish j)