Yes but only little kids use it to be honest. It'd be weird if an actual Italian adult used it for their older sister. It sounds cute though, so I went with it.
Yes but only little kids use it to be honest. It'd be weird if an actual Italian adult used it for their older sister. It sounds cute though, so I went with it.
Oh... I thought another ship named "Sorellona" was present somewhere and that was who was being addressed.
That's what I get for being lazy and not even trying to read the JP original.
On the other hand, the plane's engine manufacturer, Alfa Romeo S.p.A., made a poster commemorating the operation's success.During the war, the Germans and the Japanese used submarines to establish direct contact with one another.That poster
was a filthy lie!!H-how
could
they!?Buon giorno Giappone.I have arrived at Germany.For some reason the poster had drawn Japanese wearing topknots and katanasThis operation was a brilliant success. They arrived from Rome to Tokyo!!Sorellona!! Sorellona!! It's terrible!!But the route the Japanese planned was impossible! We're outta here!They don't even carry katanas!They probably knew, and it's probably just a caricature.... probably.*shooock*But they flew through the Soviet airspace, of which Japan had a neutrality pact with the Soviet Union. So, Japan was not able to make this public to the world. The Italian crew were then confined, which outraged the crew. The crew ended up leaving in a hurry.Came with five people.Air travel is like
child's play
to us Italians.
Ah huh~?In Japan, it's school swimsuits, dechi!!What's
wrong?The Italians, however, used a different method. Rather than use of submarines, they instead took the route by air.They say there's no one in Japan who has a topknot any more!!Operation name: "L'esigenza ’G’" ("The need ’G’")
"G" = "Giappone" = "Japan" in Italian.