@@dancingwiththelilys9391 lol dog food is a chineese term which basically being fed or forced to "eat" a display of affection, its usually used by us single dog💀
Hii awesome video i just wanted to add something for future videos so uhm "sama/kun/san/chan" isn't used in the apothecary diaries because it actually takes place in imperial china and not japan. So maybe next time use " master/lady/consort" instead and then the lower ranked are either called servant/junic or just their name. But your video was so awesome other than that my nerdy brain just had to meddle a bit
again ,, thank you ! I just think that using such honorifics or nicknames that are used in the original anime/manga makes their characters and personalities feel more realistic towards the viewers, and because there's actually no direct translation for *most* honorifics in the japanese dub like when Jinshi calls all consorts “-hi” but lower ranks call them “-sama”, there's no direct translation and captions often switch between lady and consort despite who the person is , really , thank you for the suggestion and advice ! ,, I'm just used to using such honorifics/japanese personal nicknames in my videos despite the anime's settings because they're still an anime/manga, or because it's widely known for the Japanese dub
@@nikoyumii oh ok, I watched only english dub because them speaking Japanese made me nerd panic lol. Glad my comment gave a positive impression and I can see why you used such honorifics when it was used in the anime. Hope you have an awesome day or night your video was great ヾ(❀╹◡╹)ノ゙❀~
thank you ! I make plenty of reaction videos with some animes that take place in different countries, I watch these animes very diligently and take note of their honorifics because I believe it strengthens their dialogues and makes it feel more realistic and true to their character. thank *you for pointing it out though.
People saying Jinmao is canon,he literally almost killed her in the manga because he was annoyed that MaoMao rejected jis proposing to marriage few times.