I always figured the reason they use the same kanji as "breast" (or "milk") was because the limestone looked kind of like milk pouring.
Which also reminds me that some denizen of 2ch recently thought up a slightly nicer-sounding nickname for small breasts (貧乳, hinnyuu, lit. "poor breasts") - "low-fat milk" (低脂肪乳, teishibounyuu). It seems to be catching on... just a little bit.
Reader-added tags include "Konpeito #1 would've been a better choice, Sanae-san", "Excalibolg", "Unconsciously intricate suicide", and "But ultimately, you'll be returning to the valley of Sanae-san's bosom..."
The survey heeds the wife's call to arms:
Let's hand over a weapon to Sanae-san: • Sword • Hammer • Lance • Bow gun • Pipe
"Excalibolg"? I know that Caladbolg is thought to be an archetypal antecedent to Excalibur, but what's with the combined name? (Especially seeing how it's not likely to mean anything, since Excalibur is Latin and Caladbolg is Gaelic.)
"Excalibolg"? I know that Caladbolg is thought to be an archetypal antecedent to Excalibur, but what's with the combined name? (Especially seeing how it's not likely to mean anything, since Excalibur is Latin and Caladbolg is Gaelic.)
It's an anime reference, I think it's called Bokusatsu Tenshi Dokuro-chan.
"Excalibolg"? I know that Caladbolg is thought to be an archetypal antecedent to Excalibur, but what's with the combined name? (Especially seeing how it's not likely to mean anything, since Excalibur is Latin and Caladbolg is Gaelic.)
Ladies and gentlemen, Danbooru viewers, for your viewing amusement we present Excalibolg.
Ladies and gentlemen, Danbooru viewers, for your viewing amusement we present Excalibolg.
In your waterfall pool!
EXCALIBOOOOOOOLG!
800 m point.Kogasa-san...I'd at least like to get as far as the Hatsune types.ResolveRan-san...100 m point.Large TypeThe kanji for "stalactite" (鍾乳石) roughly mean "collected breast stone", so the compound for "large stalactite" is the same as for "large breasts".Hatsune TypeAside from being a Vocaloid name, "hatsune" means "the first birdsong of spring". I'm not sure quite how it ties into stalactite formation.Sh'chkkGweh heh heh heh heh hehOh, indeed!