Maybe I'm being a little too much of a grammar Nazi here, but I had such a hard time understanding, "boys love notes," that I had to click just to see what the heck it meant. Grammatically, it should read "Boys' Love Notes," or preferably even "Boys' Love - Notes," or something. I get that the url can't contain the apostrophe, but I really think the title on the page should at least make sense. However, I think that the singular "Boy Love: Notes" would make more sense, but maybe that's just me.
Koveras
topic
02:05:39 PM Oct 12th 2010
Holy crap, so detailed. Why can't they make a similar thing for Girls Love genre? T__T
72.211.231.73
topic
12:59:57 PM Jul 30th 2010
It says "wanko" means a dog's bark. "Wanko" is the little kid word for "puppy", having combined "wan" (dog bark) and "ko" (kid). So it means literally, "barking child". It's the word for puppy, not the word for barking (despite having wan in it) so i'm going to go ahead and change that on the page.
LeighSabio
topic
10:31:21 PM Jun 17th 2010
This has been bugging me for a long time. How are "seme" and "uke" even pronounced?
CBanana
11:17:44 PM Jun 17th 2010
Assuming I have my romanji pronunciation right, "seme" is pronouced say-may while "uke" is pronounced oo-kay.
lebrel
12:02:38 PM Jun 18th 2010 edited by lebrel
Depending on how your region pronounces what is given here as "ay", that may or may not be correct. According to Wikipedia "The e sounds to English speakers like a mix between short e in as in "bed", and long e as in "lay", though it is closer to the former than the latter."
My preferred explanation is that "seme" and "uke" both have two syllables and rhyme with "meh", as in "meh, I'll do it later". Seh-meh and oo-keh.