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「Suck」の使用はタブー?
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英語の「Suck」といえば、本来は「吸う」や「しゃぶる」などを意味し、性的な意味合いもあることから使用を避けられがちかと思いますが、ネイティブの日常会話では、いかがわしい意味以外のスラングとしても非常に頻繁に使われている単語なので、今日はその用法について触れていこうと思います。
~suckの本来の意味~
suckは本来、「吸う」や「しゃぶる」、「なめる」を意味する単語です。例えば、「ストローで吸う」は“Suck on a straw.”、「ペロペロキャンディーをなめる」は“Suck on a lollipop.”、「私の息子は親指をしゃぶります」は“My son sucks his thumb.”と言います。その他、“Vacuum cleaners suck dust from the floor.”のように、掃除機が床のホコリを吸い取る意味でも使えます。
~日常会話で使われるsuckの意味と用法~
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1) ____ sucks
→「ひどい / 最悪 / つまらない」
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suckは「ひどい」「最悪」「つまらない」の意味でよく使われる口語的な表現です。例えば、「この料理は最悪だ」は“This food sucks.”、「この映画はつまらない」は“That movie sucks.”、「私の仕事は最悪だ」は“My job sucks.”のように表現します。一般的に“____ sucks”の形式が使われます。
<例文>
That restaurant has a nice vibe, but the food sucks.
(あのレストランは雰囲気はいいけど、料理がひどいよ。)
I don't get what the hype is all about. I thought that movie sucked.
(なんであの映画がすごく話題になっているのか分からない。僕はあの映画は最悪だと思ったんだけどね。)
My job sucks. It doesn't pay well and I have to work long hours.
(私の仕事は最悪です。給料は安いし、長時間働かないといけない。)
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2) That sucks
→「それはひどいね / 残念だね / ついてないね」
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“That sucks.”は「それはひどいね」や「残念だね」、「ついてないね」を意味し、不幸や災難といった悪い出来事に対する同情を表す表現として使われるインフォーマルなフレーズです。
✔友人のペットや誰かが亡くなった場合など深刻なシーンでの使用は非常に失礼にあたるので避けましょう。その場合は、“I'm very sorry.”や“I'm sorry to hear that.”を使うようにしましょう。
<例文>
The tickets sold out? That sucks.
(チケットが売り切れ?ついていないね。)
I can't believe your flight got delayed for 8 hours. That sucks.
(飛行機が8時間も遅れるなんて信じられない。ホント、ありえないよね。)
That sucks. If I were you, I would have complained to the manager.
(それはひどい。私だったらマネージャーに文句を言ってるよ。)
〜会話例1〜
A: I just needed one more point to pass! It's so frustrating.
(あと1点で合格だったのに!悔しいよ。)
B: Ah man, that sucks.
(あー、それは残念だね。)
〜会話例2〜
A: I was supposed to study abroad in Vancouver this year, but it got canceled because of the coronavirus.
(今年はバンクーバーに留学する予定だったのにコロナで中止になっちゃったよ。)
B: Are you serious? That sucks. Hopefully, you can go next year.
(マジで?それは最悪。来年は行けるといいね。)
〜会話例3〜
A: It was raining the whole time I was there. It was terrible.
(旅行中、ずっと雨だったよ。最悪だった。)
B: Wow, that sucks. I had a similar experience when I went to Thailand last year.
(それはついてないね。私も去年タイに行った時、同じような経験をしたよ。)
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3) Suck(s) at ____
→「〜が下手 / 〜が苦手」
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suckはスポーツや楽器が「下手」、学校の科目が「苦手」と表現する時にも使うことができ、その場合は“suck at ____”の形式が使われます。例えば、「私はビリヤードが下手です」は“I suck at pool.”、「彼は運転が下手です」は“He sucks at driving.”、「彼女は絵を描くのが苦手です」は“She sucks at drawing.”のように表現します。
ちなみに、「君は下手くそだな」と言いたい時はシンプルに“You suck!”と言います。“You suck!”は状況によって、「君は役立たずだ」や「あなたは最低だ」の意味になることもあるので、状況に応じて判断しましょう。
✔「(彼は)〜が下手」→「(He) sucks at _____」
✔「(彼は)へたくそ」→「(He) sucks!」
<例文>
I suck at cooking. I go to the convenience store or order on Uber Eats every day.
(私は料理が下手なので、毎日コンビニに行くかUber Eatsで注文します。)
He seriously sucks at driving. Honestly, he shouldn't be on the road. It's hazardous.
(彼は運転が本当に下手。正直、彼は運転しない方がいいと思う。危険だよ。)
Is she really a professional singer? She sucks. She can't carry a tune.
(彼女は本当にプロの歌手なの?下手くそだね。音痴だよ。)
I suck at cooking. The only thing I can make is cup noodles.
(私は料理が下手です。カップ麺くらいしか作れません。)
I suck at math. I never liked math ever since I was a kid.
(私は数学が苦手です。子供の時からずっと数学は嫌いでした。)
He really sucks. He needs more practice.
(彼はホントに下手くそだね。もっと練習しないといけないよ。)
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4) Suck it up
→「我慢しなさい」
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“suck it up”は「我慢しなさい」を意味する口語的な言い方です。特にグダグダと愚痴をこぼしたり弱音を吐いている人に対して使われることが多く、文句を言わずに「我慢してやりなさい、終わらせないさい、なんとかしなさい」といった意味になります。“suck it up”は必ずこの組み合わせで使われるので、このまま覚えましょう。
<例文>
Look. I know you're exhausted, but suck it up. We have to finish this by today.
(クタクタに疲れているのは分かってるけど、我慢して。今日中に終わらせないといけないので)
My leg cramped up during the marathon, but I sucked it up and finished the race.
(マラソン中に足がつりましたが、我慢して完走しました。)
Don't put off your project. Just suck it up and finish tonight.
(プロジェクトを後回しにしない。つべこべ言わないで言わないで今夜中に終わらせない)
〜会話例〜
A: It's too hot. I don't want to do this anymore.
(暑すぎる。もうやりたくないよ。)
B: Suck it up. We're almost done. Let's finish up.
(もうすぐ終わるんだから我慢しなよ。終わらせよう。)
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同時也有4部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過15萬的網紅pennyccw,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Rasheed Wallace could not miss for three quarters and his teammates could not miss in the fourth. Wallace scored 30 points and the Portland Trail Bla...
「marathon a day for a year」的推薦目錄:
- 關於marathon a day for a year 在 Hapa Eikaiwa Facebook 的最佳解答
- 關於marathon a day for a year 在 Hana's Lexis Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於marathon a day for a year 在 AppWorks Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於marathon a day for a year 在 pennyccw Youtube 的精選貼文
- 關於marathon a day for a year 在 Nasser Amparna Youtube 的精選貼文
- 關於marathon a day for a year 在 YYTV 許洋洋媽媽說 Youtube 的最佳解答
marathon a day for a year 在 Hana's Lexis Facebook 的精選貼文
no im not a PSG fan 😏 their merch iz 🔥🔥 tho
anw, happi new year babiez! eat healthy. live healthy. be active. listen to more wise words. let the chill music heal your mind n soul. don't rush. keep on learning n grinding. don't compare yourself to others. cut down on social media. be a better you every day. take care of your beloveds. it's ok to be a lil different - no need to ask for permission n validation. late bloomers can still shine brighter than most. life's a marathon not a sprint. i feel u. it's rly ok.
hehe 😁
marathon a day for a year 在 AppWorks Facebook 的精選貼文
Interview with A Founder: Conor McLaughlin (Co-founder of 99.co)
By David Wu (AppWorks Associate)
Conor McLaughlin was previously the Co-founder and CTO of 99.co, the real estate marketplace in Singapore and Indonesia. He spent six and a half years at the startup, whose backers include Sequoia Capital, 500 Startups, and Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin, helping to grow it into a $100 million company. As a member of AppWorks Accelerator #21, he is currently working on his next big project, a yet-to-be-named language learning startup.
【What advice do you have for first-time founders?】
First, you need to decide: do I want to run a sprint or a marathon? For a sprint, you may be open to acquisition from the beginning, delay non-startup aspects of your life, give yourself two years where you drop everything to test an idea, choose to raise more money earlier on and thus be more diluted, or do anything else that implies a shorter time horizon. Typically 1-5 years - this can lead to a major boon in a short period of time if executed well. If you decide you are in the sprinting business, you will most likely be pushed toward binary outcomes because of how many investors and employees you have on your cap table. As a first-time founder, you need to be clear with yourself on what you are willing to put on the line. As Reid Hoffman says, it’s like jumping off a cliff and building a plane on the way down… hopefully you build a plane in time.
If you are running a marathon, you are deciding that your competitive advantage is consistency over intensity. You are in this for 10, 15 years. With this time horizon, you will realize you need ways to metabolize stress and maintain emotional, spiritual, and mental health. You need to maintain relationships with friends, family, and romantic partners. When you are looking at this 10 year period, you realize the people around you can only put up with so much. Unfortunately, while work is something people can generally bounce back from, there are many things in life where you cannot - an example is your relationship with your partner. If you’re going to run a marathon, you need to be clear with yourself about what time you have for other aspects of your life and what time you have for your company. Eventually you need to learn what the right speed is where you can run as long as possible. It’s amazing how often it is that those people that keep going, assuming you have chosen the right problem to solve, eventually find daylight. Part of that is just lasting long enough.
Second, you need to revisit and continually ask yourself: should I still be running a sprint or a marathon? Circumstances change. Maybe you sprinted for the first two years to secure interesting results and funding; now it's time to transition to a marathon and clean up the life debt a bit. Or inversely, maybe you're finally leaving the trough of sorrow and it's time to sprint for a bit. Most founders will be in a long distance race with periodic sprinting. From my observation, founders most often stop because of two reasons: They either A) run out of money or B) run out of energy. There’s plenty of advice out there for scenario A (hint: don’t). But in my experience, scenario B is far more pernicious and dangerous to would-be successful founders. If you are in a marathon but fail to pace yourself and run it like one long sprint, you are unlikely to make it to the end.
Much founder advice speaks to this: Don’t let your startup make you fat. Exercise 5-10% of the time. Pick up a hobby outside of your startup. Go home for holidays. All of it leads back to one thing: You need to take care of yourself. Because injury will be far worse for your progress than being a little slower. “Slow is smooth, smooth is fast”, as the US Navy Seals say. This is surprisingly difficult advice for intrinsically motivated founders to follow, because in the event of failure, it makes them vulnerable to the thought, “Well, you didn’t work hard enough.” But for those that already have the hustle, your job is to avoid the moment of epiphany where you look in the mirror and think, “This isn’t worth it.”
All founders will have to sacrifice some things. The point is to not sacrifice everything. It will make you more resilient. Not less. It will give you the space to see situations more objectively and make better decisions. And most importantly, it will let you love what you do because it will remind you that the work isn’t just in service of yourself, it’s in the service of others. I do not think you can judge hard work over a day, or even a year, but I do think you can judge hard work over 5-10 years. Hard work is not just about the next 1-2 months. There will be times when you need to run as fast as possible, but if that is happening all the time you are probably not being smart about the situation. So don’t hurt yourself, be consistent, keep disciplined, and keep going.
Lastly, focus on your metaskills. Public speaking, reading, writing - skills applied in every aspect of your life. Generally what they reflect is learning how to think better. As a founder you need to think about - how can I think more clearly, be more creative, rigorous, analytical? As Warren Buffett and others have said: I have never seen a successful person that did not read as often as they could. Actual books and long form scare a lot of people. That’s your competitive advantage. Read blog posts from smart people, follow smart people on Twitter, listen to podcasts. Always be focused on how you can develop yourself to think better. Fostering the habit of improving your thinking will foster discipline in yourself. And discipline will let you turn that rigorous thinking into action.
【I imagine running the “race” has been especially tough this year. How have you gotten through 2020?】
I have leaned on routine and community. I’ve spent a lot of time trying to foster discipline in myself. I make my bed every morning, meditate every morning, make sure that I go to the gym 3-4 times a week. There’s so much uncertainty in both the world and the entrepreneurial space. Keeping certain things consistent gives me a spine to my life that I can fall back on. If I’m not feeling well, my discipline takes over and I’ll go to the gym. That helps me relieve stress - falling back to routine and having some mainstays of consistency and structure.
And community - it’s been the big mental health zeitgeist of this year. Everyone is recognizing that without the people around us, our mental health diminishes. Joining AppWorks was very intentional so I could surround myself with like-minded people who could question me, hold me accountable, and inspire me. And also just forming personal connections where I felt that I was still taking care of my mental health by connecting with others. Being a founder is an incredibly lonely journey. In the early days, there’s not a lot of people around. Later, when you do hire lots of people, you need to be the boss, the leader - for certain things, you can’t tell the employees everything, and even if you do, there will always be a bit of distance. You need people to relate to - people want to be seen for who they are, and appreciated for what they give. When you are a founder, sometimes it’s hard to feel that you are seen. So I intentionally put myself in situations where I can be inspired, be held accountable, and more importantly connect with others, and feel that I’m not alone. And that me and my co-founders are part of a communal journey with those around us.
【When you talk about how to run the race, I get the sense that you’re drawing from previous experiences and, perhaps, mistakes. What are the mistakes you’ve made in your founder journey and the takeaways?】
I think you could take a calendar, point to a random week, and we could list out all the mistakes from that week (laughs). I do subscribe to Steve Jobs’ philosophy: mistakes will happen, but mistakes happening means we are making decisions. Not making decisions is perhaps the biggest mistake. It’s often the reason for frustration, loss of speed, loss of momentum - so many of the issues you encounter in startups. Not making enough mistakes is probably the #1 mistake that I’ve made.
Second, going back to my advice to first-time founders, is not understanding what game I’m playing. Not understanding that all the money in the world is not going to be worth it if your spouse or partner decides to leave you because you have relegated them to a second-class citizen in your life. I think I forgot that at points. There is more to life than just the company.
Third, be careful about who you choose to work with. At minimum, if you’re doing a standard 8-9 hours at the office five times a week, that’s a lot of time with those people. You want to like the people that you work with - you want to know they’re high integrity, you want to respect their values, and you want to have common values. Choosing the right people that give you energy rather than take it away just makes running the marathon so much easier.
【We welcome all AI, Blockchain, or Southeast Asia founders to join AppWorks Accelerator: https://bit.ly/3r4lLR8 】
marathon a day for a year 在 pennyccw Youtube 的精選貼文
Rasheed Wallace could not miss for three quarters and his teammates could not miss in the fourth.
Wallace scored 30 points and the Portland Trail Blazers scored on their first 10 possessions of the final period, snapping a season-high six-game losing streak with a 96-88 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers.
Wallace made 13-of-20 shots, including 4-of-4 3-pointers. The two-time All-Star flashed his inside-outside game and helped the Trail Blazers open an 11-point lead early in the third quarter.
"It was just a good game, everybody out there playing hard," a terse Wallace said. "That's all. Nothing new."
"Rasheed is an All-Star and what he did tonight was no surprise," 76ers guard Eric Snow said. "You've just got to try to limit his shots."
The 76ers fought back within 71-70 early in the final period before Wallace made a 3-pointer to start a 19-5 surge. Working against the stingiest defense in the NBA, the Blazers simply were unstoppable.
Wallace sat for most of the decisive surge but it did not seem to matter. Damon Stoudamire made two straight jumpers and a layup, Shawn Kemp drilled two long jumpers and Derek Anderson made a pair before two free throws by Ruben Patterson gave the Blazers a 90-75 lead with 5:49 remaining.
Stoudamire scored 19 points and Kemp had 10 for Portland, which shot 51 percent (42-of-82) and looked nothing like the team that was mired in its longest losing streak in over six years.
"It depends on how many minutes are available," said Kemp, who has come off the bench and struggled most of the season. "It's up to me to make the most of it."
Stoudamire also had 11 assists as the Blazers did a terrific job of sharing the ball. They had 33 assists and repeatedly passed ahead of Philadelphia's defensive rotations.
"We finally put a win together," Stoudamire said. "We have to play like that every game."
"That's the way we're going to win games," Portland coach Maurice Cheeks said. "It was probably the most heady game we played all year. We made the right decisions. We seemed to play smart. We played under control."
It was a sweet win for Cheeks, who was a player and assistant coach in Philadelphia for nearly 20 years.
"That wasn't easy," Cheeks said. "I was having fun with them. They were having fun with me."
"It was tough," said Sixers coach Larry Brown, who had Cheeks as an assistant for four years. "I thought if we won it wouldn't be something I'd enjoy."
Derrick Coleman scored 21 points and Allen Iverson added 18 for the 76ers, who completed a marathon seven-game, 12-day road trip at 3-4. The Sixers fell to 8-13 on the road but do not travel further west than Milwaukee for the rest of the season.
"We learned a lot about each other as a team and accomplished something as a team, not as individuals," Iverson said. "It's been tough playing on the road, so it will be good playing in our own gym."
Philadelphia has lost nine of its last 11 games in Portland.
The Sixers scored the first 10 points of the game, but Wallace scored 14 points in the opening period as the Blazers stormed back to take a 27-24 lead.
A jumper by Coleman gave Philadelphia a 42-41 lead with 4 1/2 minutes left in the first half before Wallace made two jumpers in a 9-1 burst gave Portland a 50-43 lead. Consecutive jumpers by Stoudamire opened the third quarter.
Iverson's jumper cut the deficit to 67-65 late in the period. A 3-pointer by Aaron McKie opened the final quarter and made it 69-68.
Scottie Pippen had nine points and nine assists and Patterson and Dale Davis scored eight points each for the Blazers, who held a 46-30 rebounding edge.
McKie scored 17 points and Snow added 15 and seven assists for the Sixers, who shot 41.5 percent (34-of-82).
marathon a day for a year 在 Nasser Amparna Youtube 的精選貼文
#JVLOG 8
May 6, 2017
with the Hashtag #LiveTheBeat. TMR delivers!
Who says you can't run? The Music Run provides us a great venue to run while enjoying your favorite music be it pop, rock, hiphop, dance, old school, etc. Also, lots of food stall, booth and freebies are provided to pamper the whole day.
I enjoyed running this year and I will definitely run next year! See you next year at The Music Run 2018!!
The Music Run™
WEBSITE: www.themusicrun.com
SUBSCRIBE to their CHANNEL
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheMusicRunGlobal
===================
LET'S CONNECT
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/lillboykyut/
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/jangamparna
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/lillboykyut
TUMBLR: http://lillboykyut.tumblr.com/
===================
MUSIC:
**NO COPYRIGHT INTENDED
* Youtube Music Library
*Tobu - Rollercoaster
* Desmeon - Hellcat [NCS Release]
SUBSCRIBE TO THEM: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_aE...
TATA for NOW!
Please Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE
God bless everyone!
marathon a day for a year 在 YYTV 許洋洋媽媽說 Youtube 的最佳解答
【200訂閱感謝】為什麼要成立YYTV原因大公開~悲慘又溫馨的故事!許洋洋的2016回顧!|Channel beginning |YYTVのきっかけ
☞ 訂閱 YYTV/許洋洋愛唱歌 https://goo.gl/kNUv4c ♫ 6Y8M 小一生
――――――――――――――――――――――――――――
【影片主題 / Topic / テーマ】
【200訂閱感謝】為什麼要成立YYTV原因大公開~悲慘又溫馨的故事!許洋洋的2016回顧!|Channel beginning |YYTVのきっかけ
0:00:04
首先謝謝大家 讓我在一個半月 達到200人訂閱!
Thanks everyone let me in one and a half months to reach 200 subscribers!
1ヶ月半で200チャネール登録!みんなありがとうございました!
其實我媽媽在2012年就建立這個頻道
In fact, my mother in 2012 to establish this channel
2012年に私の母はこのチャネルを成立しました
從我2歲開始,媽媽就上傳我唱歌的影片
From the time I was 2 years old, my mother uploaded my video
私が2歳だった頃から、母は私のビデオをアップロードしました
唱黃明志的歌,還被黃明志分享在他的臉書
I sang Namewee’s song, Namewee also shared in his facebook
Nameweeの歌を歌って、Nameweeも彼のFacebookにシェアしました
前幾個月我媽媽出車禍,肋骨斷了好幾根
A few months ago my mother in a car accident, broken several ribs
数ヶ月前に私の母親は交通事故で、いくつかの肋骨を折られました
醫生說要在家休養不能上班
The doctor said that my monther must rest at home and can not go to work
医者の言葉によって、母は家で休んで、会社に行くことができないです。
都是爸爸和阿媽在照顧我
My father and grandmother were looking after me
私の父と祖母は私を見守っていました
媽媽因為躺在床上太無聊了
Mother was too bored in the bed
母は丸一日ベッドであまりにも退屈だった
才想說好好的來經營我的頻道
She want to manage my channel
チャンネルを管理したいです
因為他製作影片要花很久的時間
Because he must make the video to take a long time
母はビデオを作るため、長い時間がかかります
す。
而且就算他躺在床上也能做
And even if he was lying in bed can do the thing
母がベッドに横たわっていても、そのことをすることができます
覺得時間一下就過去了
Make video will feel that time flies
ビデオを作る時間が速く過ぎました
所以我就開始拍片
So I started filming
だから私は撮影を始めました
我媽媽常說,我不是才剛出生嗎?
My mother used to say, am I not just born?
母はよく私に言って、生まれたばかりではない
怎麼一下就長大了
Why do you grow up so fast
なぜあなたはとても速く成長するのですか
所以她想用影片紀錄每天的我
So she wanted to use the video record my every day
だから彼女は私の毎日の動画を残したいです
以後長大才可以回顧
In the future, I also can review it.
将来、私はそれを回顧することもできます
而且我那麼愛唱歌
And I love singing so much
そして私はそんなに歌うのが大好き
以後在這裡唱才有人聽
I will have fans in the channel
私はチャンネルにファンに歌うことができます
她說這個頻道是她留給我一輩子最好的寶藏
She said that this channel is the best she left me a lifetime treasure
母はこのチャンネルが私にとって最高の宝だと言った
也是她對我的愛
The channel is her love for me
チャンネルが母の愛で作成されました
一月中我媽媽就要回去上班了
My mother will go back to work in January
私の母は1月に仕事場に戻ります
但是她說他還是會努力製作影片
But she said she will continue to make the video
しかし母はビデオを作り続けると言いました
今天是2016年的最後一天
Today is last day of 2016
今日は2016年の最後の日です
我們來看看我今年有什麼值得記念的事情
Let's watch what I have to remember this year
今年私の記念すべきことを見てみましょう
1月份我學會騎腳踏車,還有我在台灣看到下雪
In January I can ride a bike, and I saw snow in Taiwan
1月には自転車に乗ることができ、台湾では雪を見ました
我有去六福村玩,很近的看到獅子
I have to go to Leofoo Village to play, very close to see the lion
私は六福村に遊びに行きました、非常に近いライオンを見ることがあります
2月份 因為爸爸要去跑東京馬拉松,
In February because my father was going to join the Tokyo Marathon,
2月には父が東京マラソンに参加するために、
所以我也一起去日本東京自由行
So I went to Tokyo, Japan together
私は一緒に東京に行きました。 日本旅行
有去迪士尼,也有搭HATO BUS,去一個很好玩的兒童天地(Aneby) ,看到晴空塔
I went to Disney, take the HATO BUS, a very fun children world (Aneby) and went to skytree
ディズニーに行き、非常に楽しい子供の世界であるハトーバス(Aneby)を行ってskytreeにも行きました
還有去台場
I went to Odaiba, Lego Paradise, Lego Paradise very very fun
お台場に行きました
去富士電視台和小丸子,還有最近解散的SMAP照相
I also went to Fuji TV, to take a picture with Chibi Maruko and recently disbanded SMAP
私はまた、Fuji TVに行ってChibi Marukoと、最近解散したSMAPを写真を撮りました
樂高樂園超級無敵好玩
Lego Paradise, Lego Paradise veryfun
レゴパラダイスに行きました.レゴパラダイスはとても楽しい
最後還去大江戶溫泉
At last we went to Oedo Onsen
最後の日、大江戸温泉に行きました
0:02:12
3月份 我上東森幼幼台參加比賽,想看的話請點這邊
In March, I went to YOYO TV to participate in the competition, you can click here to watch
3月はYOYO TVへ試合に参加しました。ここをクリックしてご覧下さい
還有從11/14開始我就拍片到現在
Also from 11/14 I began to take a vedio until now
また11/14から、私は今まで動画を作っています
要謝謝四葉草姐姐在臉書分享我的影片
Thanks to Joyce Chu for sharing my videos in Facebook
Facebookで動画をシェアしてくれたJoyce Chuに感謝します
也要謝謝心動音樂電台讓我當一日DJ
Also thank pulse radio let me become a one day DJ
また、私を1日DJになったパルスラジオにも感謝します
希望大家繼續支持我
I hope you will continue to support me
今後とも引き続きどうぞ宜しくお願いします
我會再介紹更多好玩,有趣的東東
I will introduce more fun, interesting things
私はもっと楽しいものを紹介します
唱更多好聽的歌喔!
Sing more songs!
もっと歌を歌います
【關鍵字/ Keyword /キーワード】
200,訂閱感謝,為什麼要成立頻道,大公開,悲慘又溫馨,2016回顧,Channel beginning,きっかけ,東京馬拉松,Tokyo Marathon,東京マラソン,東京自由行,日本旅行,Aneby,HATO BUS,晴空塔,台場,富士電視台,小丸子,SMAP,Fuji TV,樂高,Lego,レゴ,大江戶溫泉,四葉草,黃明志,卓越盃,
6歲童翻唱,玩具,故事書,TOY,おもちゃ,COVER,翻唱,歌詞,注音,拼音,和弦,pinyin lyric,ピンイン,歌詞あり,台灣,小學,小學生,一年級,生活,學中文,YYTV,許洋洋,愛唱歌,中文,英文,英語,日文,Taiwan, Chinese, Mandarin, Easy Chinese, Study Chinese, Chinese, English, Japanese, children,台湾,簡単,中国語,中国語勉強,小学,小学生,学校,生活,漢字,一年生,英語,日本語,子供,歌
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