WTH Does that means !?
.
It means "older sister." 
@NFFU
You can't differentiate them?Chinese is more complicated and complex. Japanese isn't, and I know some like no and tsu that will make me easier to know that it's Japanese. While Hangul (korean letter), they looked like consist of round, line, and square
Fun fact: Letters that are used in korean, japanese, chinese, and arabian are the most difficult letters to be learned
It's very easy to differentiate if you learn those languages (even the slightest).
East Asian languages (mainly Chinese, Japanese, and Korean) use Chinese characters, it's all thanks to the Chinese immigrants in history. They're known as Hanzi (Chinese), Kanji (Japanese), and Hanja (Korean). It's commonly used in China, Japan (but not all), Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, and Singapore. However, it's rarely used in Korea. Here's the example.
Japanese characters has 3 sets: hiragana, katakana, and kanji. These 3 character sets form a sentence in Japanese language. However, many Japanese people can't read kanji so furigana (consists of hiragana and/or katakana to translate kanji) is used.
Chinese characters (hanzi) have many strokes that it's hard to write using your hand. Btw, Chinese has divided into two in terms of writing: simplified and traditional Chinese. Chinese language is the hardest to learn out of the other East Asian languages. You can ask Hanabi-neechan/Hanabi-eonni for more details since she's Chinese.
Korean characters (hangul) is the easiest to learn, to memorize, and to differentiate out of the other East Asian languages. Korean people doesn't use hanja today but it exists in Korean literature.
Tip: If you can't see either hiragana and/or katakana in a sentence, it's Chinese. Otherwise, it's Japanese. If you see a square-circle-line characters, it's Korean.
Edited by Tokura Misaki, 27 June 2015 - 01:26 AM.












