There's no he in japanese from what i've been told (or fully gendered pronouns and the likes), so that would be on the translators for deciding on it. It's language quirks that people tend to forgetThe whole time she was describing him I was wondering if she would ever stop saying "they" and say "he" lol. It did seem like she did say "he" once but the dad didn't catch it
iirc, there is no 'he/she word' in Japanese. It's 'That person'. Please correct me if I'm wrongThe whole time she was describing him I was wondering if she would ever stop saying "they" and say "he" lol. It did seem like she did say "he" once but the dad didn't catch it
There's no he in japanese from what i've been told (or fully gendered pronouns and the likes), so that would be on the translators for deciding on it. It's language quirks that people tend to forget
There are he/her words in Japanese; they're 彼 "kare" for he/him and 彼女 "kanojo" for she/her, respectively. They're just basically never used in regular speech, because Japanese is very much about context clues.iirc, there is no 'he/she word' in Japanese. It's 'That person'. Please correct me if I'm wrong
There are actually. The dad's head would absolutely explode because of it though, given the secondary meaning of it.iirc, there is no 'he/she word' in Japanese. It's 'That person'. Please correct me if I'm wrong
she probably using gender neutral term like "my friend" and just simply not including the subject in the sentence, which common in Japanese conversation but can be hard to translate.The whole time she was describing him I was wondering if she would ever stop saying "they" and say "he" lol. It did seem like she did say "he" once but the dad didn't catch it