What does できなさすぎる means? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)sometimes だけ gets mildly confusing..Is 〜ている really this subtle?How would you use 裏切り in a sentence?“Too [adj] to [verb]” structureUsing location words with Subject/topic markersHow to express the concept of there being too much?Do story/literature need to be written politely?Why does this sentence mean what it means?An expression that means “speaking of X” or “while we're on this topic…”What does そうするの mean here?
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What does できなさすぎる means?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)sometimes だけ gets mildly confusing..Is 〜ている really this subtle?How would you use 裏切り in a sentence?“Too [adj] to [verb]” structureUsing location words with Subject/topic markersHow to express the concept of there being too much?Do story/literature need to be written politely?Why does this sentence mean what it means?An expression that means “speaking of X” or “while we're on this topic…”What does そうするの mean here?
So I know that すぎる means too much, like 昨日お酒を飲みすぎた, etc.
but when it comes to something like:
何々をすることができなさすぎる
Does it mean:
1 - I can't do "this" at all.
or
2 - I can't do "this" too much.
So if I say:
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる。
Do I mean I can't eat natto at all, or do I mean that I can eat it just a little, but can't eat it too much?
And if "1" is the right answer, how different is it from things like 全然できない/全くできない?
grammar slang internet-slang
add a comment |
So I know that すぎる means too much, like 昨日お酒を飲みすぎた, etc.
but when it comes to something like:
何々をすることができなさすぎる
Does it mean:
1 - I can't do "this" at all.
or
2 - I can't do "this" too much.
So if I say:
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる。
Do I mean I can't eat natto at all, or do I mean that I can eat it just a little, but can't eat it too much?
And if "1" is the right answer, how different is it from things like 全然できない/全くできない?
grammar slang internet-slang
add a comment |
So I know that すぎる means too much, like 昨日お酒を飲みすぎた, etc.
but when it comes to something like:
何々をすることができなさすぎる
Does it mean:
1 - I can't do "this" at all.
or
2 - I can't do "this" too much.
So if I say:
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる。
Do I mean I can't eat natto at all, or do I mean that I can eat it just a little, but can't eat it too much?
And if "1" is the right answer, how different is it from things like 全然できない/全くできない?
grammar slang internet-slang
So I know that すぎる means too much, like 昨日お酒を飲みすぎた, etc.
but when it comes to something like:
何々をすることができなさすぎる
Does it mean:
1 - I can't do "this" at all.
or
2 - I can't do "this" too much.
So if I say:
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる。
Do I mean I can't eat natto at all, or do I mean that I can eat it just a little, but can't eat it too much?
And if "1" is the right answer, how different is it from things like 全然できない/全くできない?
grammar slang internet-slang
grammar slang internet-slang
edited 27 mins ago
naruto
166k8158316
166k8158316
asked 6 hours ago
Felipe OliveiraFelipe Oliveira
2,075721
2,075721
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
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oldest
votes
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる means "I can't eat natto at all" or "I am so terribly bad at natto", but it's a humorous slangy expression rather than a standard sentence. It's fine as the catchy title of a blog post or a light novel, but we should be using 全く/全然できない most of the time.
In general, ~すぎる is occasionally used as a humorous intensifier these days. It can be positive.
- お前のことが好きすぎる
- 美しすぎるアスリート10名
- これは便利すぎる! Amazonで見つけた調理器具
- 天使過ぎるアイドル (Kanna Hashimoto's catchphrase; maybe this is the cause of the recent popularity of ~すぎる?)
1
oh really, interesting hmmm I've seen japanese people saying things like 英語ができなさすぎる... So I guess they were trying to be fun/chill with their sentence :D thanks a lot!!
– Felipe Oliveira
12 mins ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
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active
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votes
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる means "I can't eat natto at all" or "I am so terribly bad at natto", but it's a humorous slangy expression rather than a standard sentence. It's fine as the catchy title of a blog post or a light novel, but we should be using 全く/全然できない most of the time.
In general, ~すぎる is occasionally used as a humorous intensifier these days. It can be positive.
- お前のことが好きすぎる
- 美しすぎるアスリート10名
- これは便利すぎる! Amazonで見つけた調理器具
- 天使過ぎるアイドル (Kanna Hashimoto's catchphrase; maybe this is the cause of the recent popularity of ~すぎる?)
1
oh really, interesting hmmm I've seen japanese people saying things like 英語ができなさすぎる... So I guess they were trying to be fun/chill with their sentence :D thanks a lot!!
– Felipe Oliveira
12 mins ago
add a comment |
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる means "I can't eat natto at all" or "I am so terribly bad at natto", but it's a humorous slangy expression rather than a standard sentence. It's fine as the catchy title of a blog post or a light novel, but we should be using 全く/全然できない most of the time.
In general, ~すぎる is occasionally used as a humorous intensifier these days. It can be positive.
- お前のことが好きすぎる
- 美しすぎるアスリート10名
- これは便利すぎる! Amazonで見つけた調理器具
- 天使過ぎるアイドル (Kanna Hashimoto's catchphrase; maybe this is the cause of the recent popularity of ~すぎる?)
1
oh really, interesting hmmm I've seen japanese people saying things like 英語ができなさすぎる... So I guess they were trying to be fun/chill with their sentence :D thanks a lot!!
– Felipe Oliveira
12 mins ago
add a comment |
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる means "I can't eat natto at all" or "I am so terribly bad at natto", but it's a humorous slangy expression rather than a standard sentence. It's fine as the catchy title of a blog post or a light novel, but we should be using 全く/全然できない most of the time.
In general, ~すぎる is occasionally used as a humorous intensifier these days. It can be positive.
- お前のことが好きすぎる
- 美しすぎるアスリート10名
- これは便利すぎる! Amazonで見つけた調理器具
- 天使過ぎるアイドル (Kanna Hashimoto's catchphrase; maybe this is the cause of the recent popularity of ~すぎる?)
納豆を食べることができなさすぎる/食べられなさすぎる means "I can't eat natto at all" or "I am so terribly bad at natto", but it's a humorous slangy expression rather than a standard sentence. It's fine as the catchy title of a blog post or a light novel, but we should be using 全く/全然できない most of the time.
In general, ~すぎる is occasionally used as a humorous intensifier these days. It can be positive.
- お前のことが好きすぎる
- 美しすぎるアスリート10名
- これは便利すぎる! Amazonで見つけた調理器具
- 天使過ぎるアイドル (Kanna Hashimoto's catchphrase; maybe this is the cause of the recent popularity of ~すぎる?)
edited 21 mins ago
answered 28 mins ago
narutonaruto
166k8158316
166k8158316
1
oh really, interesting hmmm I've seen japanese people saying things like 英語ができなさすぎる... So I guess they were trying to be fun/chill with their sentence :D thanks a lot!!
– Felipe Oliveira
12 mins ago
add a comment |
1
oh really, interesting hmmm I've seen japanese people saying things like 英語ができなさすぎる... So I guess they were trying to be fun/chill with their sentence :D thanks a lot!!
– Felipe Oliveira
12 mins ago
1
1
oh really, interesting hmmm I've seen japanese people saying things like 英語ができなさすぎる... So I guess they were trying to be fun/chill with their sentence :D thanks a lot!!
– Felipe Oliveira
12 mins ago
oh really, interesting hmmm I've seen japanese people saying things like 英語ができなさすぎる... So I guess they were trying to be fun/chill with their sentence :D thanks a lot!!
– Felipe Oliveira
12 mins ago
add a comment |
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