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[007] Jinxycat Current Version
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is 愛児 (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\'t find a link to the actual [Hell arc] page in Japanese so that\'s not for sure but, regardless, \'ai\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://tinypic.com/r/augx84/5 from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\'s Dictionary: 慕い, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is 愛児 (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\\\'t find a link to the actual [Hell arc] page in Japanese so that\\\'s not for sure but, regardless, \\\'ai\\\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\\\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://tinypic.com/r/augx84/5 (Rin\\\'s segment) from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\\\'s Dictionary: 慕い, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\\\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is 愛児 (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\'s not for sure but, regardless, \'ai\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://tinypic.com/r/augx84/5 from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\'s Dictionary: 慕い, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
to:
A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is 愛児 (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\\\'t find a link to the actual [Hell arc] page in Japanese so that\\\'s not for sure but, regardless, \\\'ai\\\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\\\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://tinypic.com/r/augx84/5 from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\\\'s Dictionary: 慕い, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\\\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\'s not for sure but, regardless, \'ai\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this <a href=\
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\\\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\\\'s not for sure but, regardless, \\\'ai\\\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\\\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://tinypic.com/r/augx84/5 from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\\\'s Dictionary: &#24917;&#12356;, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\\\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\'s not for sure but, regardless, \'ai\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://i44.tinypic.com/augx84.jpg from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\'s Dictionary: &#24917;&#12356;, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
to:
A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\\\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\\\'s not for sure but, regardless, \\\'ai\\\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\\\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this <a href=\\\"http://tinypic.com\\\" target=\\\"_blank\\\"><img src=\\\"http://i44.tinypic.com/augx84.jpg\\\" border=\\\"0\\\" alt=\\\"Image and video hosting by TinyPic\\\"></a> from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\\\'s Dictionary: &#24917;&#12356;, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\\\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\'s not for sure but, regardless, \'ai\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this [IMG]http://i44.tinypic.com/augx84.jpg[/IMG] from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\'s Dictionary: &#24917;&#12356;, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
to:
A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\\\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\\\'s not for sure but, regardless, \\\'ai\\\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\\\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://i44.tinypic.com/augx84.jpg from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\\\'s Dictionary: &#24917;&#12356;, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\\\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\'s not for sure but, regardless, \'ai\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://tinypic.com/r/augx84/5 from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\'s Dictionary: &#24917;&#12356;, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
to:
A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\\\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\\\'s not for sure but, regardless, \\\'ai\\\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\\\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this [IMG]http://i44.tinypic.com/augx84.jpg[/IMG] from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\\\'s Dictionary: &#24917;&#12356;, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\\\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\'s not for sure but, regardless, \'ai\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of <a href=\
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A Japanese manga source is pretty sure the kanji in question is &#24859;&#20816; (aiji) which, even now, is not typically used in a platonic fashion. I can\\\'t find a link to the actual page in Japanese so that\\\'s not for sure but, regardless, \\\'ai\\\' is typically used with a romantic connotation. Take friends of a friend of mine who are Japanese and live in Japan for instance: the husband refers to his wife with -ai as a suffix. If that\\\'s not good enough, there is the fifth and six kanji of this http://tinypic.com/r/augx84/5 from a Japanese site, 1521 (which can be typed into Jisho for a reference) in the Kodansha Kanji Learner\\\'s Dictionary: &#24917;&#12356;, shita(u)i, only used in a romantic fashion to mean adore, love deeply, be attached to; yearn for, long for; pine for. If you choose to debate KKLD (KALD), the be all end all of kanji dictionaries that Japanese people keep in their own homes, then your lack of respect for such just proves it\\\'s about proving your misconceived notions of canon as you see them and not the facts.
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