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08-29-2008, 05:18 AM
To everywon I plan on living in a Suburb, cities suck in so many words. And for my English i have a mild dyslexia.
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Iv'e read 73 pages of threads lol, yes i know i should not consider citizenship but it seems like it takes forever and is better to know what i may be facing. Most likely i will stay in the states, but Japan is a really close possibility and I have to be overly prepared for every thing. So if I do want to live there I want to 100% know what im in for or at minimum have a idea. Also I just want a small yard like 1 acre. Or have a farm type place really far from city and lots of land.But idk w/e There will always be good and bad. I plan on around 100,000$ usd - 500,000$ usd ( 10,902,141.79 yen-54,490,142.28 yen) (='.'=) Signature so he can Dominate the World if you (")_(") do not obey he will flatten your pillows |
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08-29-2008, 05:35 AM
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I don't even know if there is verb for "mowing the lawn" in Japanese because I have never seen a house with a "yard" big enough to merit a lawn-mower. What is the word for "lawn mower" in Japanese? |
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08-29-2008, 06:05 AM
I know that in city areas, like Tokyo and such wouldn't have lawns, and shouldn't be expected, but what about country, rural type areas with houses? I always figured that places like those would have "lawns" since there'd probably be some actual room for them.
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08-29-2008, 10:27 AM
I think you need to think on it abit more before you jump into it.
Instead of deciding what type of house you want, decide where. Before deciding where, decide what job you'll be doing. Before deciding THAT, go to Japan and actually decide if you want to live there. As far as I know, getting into Rural communities as a foreigner is even harder than getting a place in the cities. |
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08-29-2008, 11:30 AM
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We have a yard. We mow it. It`s nowhere near an acre though. To return to the original poster - Let me get this straight... You want to live in an American countryside that just happens to be in Japan? You have made it pretty clear that you know virtually nothing about life in Japan, and absolutely no Japanese. What is the appeal? The "coolness" factor of being able to say "I live in Japan"? You`re not making all that much sense, to be quite honest. It sounds like you`d be better off buying a house in the country in the US, and decorating it in Japanese style. To give perspective, it`s sort of along the same lines as someone saying "Hey, I need to figure out the floor plan for my new private clinic that I`m going to build with all that money I made from being a top surgeon.".... When you haven`t even entered med school. You`re leaping so very far ahead of yourself that it just sounds silly. |
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