
“Maybe” probably means “no,” but it might mean “yes.”
Just learn the basics, and start understanding
After a year or two in Japan and after learning the language beyond a rudimentary level, the reverse sentence structure ceased to be an issue. It even started to sound natural.

Then learn some advanced elements, and start speaking


Then forget reason, logic, and common sense.
But I could never wrap my head around the fact that “Yes” can sometimes mean “No.” Nor could I comprehend all those other vague, unclear, deceptive, and evasive expressions.
I still can’t. I never will.
Introduction to – “Notes from Under the Tatami Mats” (right-click on title)
Top 3 Disorienting Aspects of Living in Japan
Top 3 Worst Ways to Celebrate New Year’s
Top 3 Fields in Which the Japanese Have Achieved Perfection
... and more

Links to my Other Series …
Introduction – "Intro to Vocab-ability" (right-click on title)
Guide – "Guide to Entries" (right-click on title)
Index– "Index" to all Chapters and Sections (right-click on title)
Lou Reed – "Anthology of Memorable Lyrics, Part 1" (right-click on title)
Lou Reed – "Anthology of Memorable Lyrics, Part 2" (right-click on title)
Images sourced from Google Images, unless otherwise indicated or unless my own.