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Artist

  • ? umakuchi shouyu 420

Copyright

  • ? kantai collection 510k

Characters

  • ? akagi (kancolle) 12k
  • ? kaga (kancolle) 21k

General

  • ? ! 43k
  • ? 2girls 1.1M
  • ? blush 3.2M
  • ? bottle 79k
  • ? bowl 35k
  • ? brown eyes 910k
  • ? brown hair 1.7M
  • ? chibi 275k
  • ? chopsticks 27k
  • ? comic 586k
  • ? covered face 5.1k
  • ? egg 10k
  • ? food 491k
  • ? food focus 12k
  • ? glutton 2.3k
  • ? holding 1.6M
  • ? holding bowl 8.6k
  • ? japanese clothes 429k
  • ? long hair 4.8M
  • ? multiple girls 1.7M
  • ? muneate 13k
  • ? no mouth 15k
  • ? rice 10k
  • ? side ponytail 192k
  • ? soy sauce 800
  • ? soy sauce bottle 336
  • ? sunburst 4.1k
  • ? table 94k
  • ? tamagokake gohan 132
  • ? tasuki 12k
  • ? weapon 655k
  • ? wooden table 3.5k

Meta

  • ? commentary request 3.6M
  • ? highres 6.0M
  • ? translated 581k

Information

  • ID: 2197501
  • Uploader: zeparoh »
  • Date: over 9 years ago
  • Size: 1010 KB .jpg (900x1271) »
  • Source: pixiv.net/artworks/52168616 »
  • Rating: General
  • Score: 12
  • Favorites: 25
  • Status: Active

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Resized to 94% of original (view original)
kaga and akagi (kantai collection) drawn by umakuchi_shouyu

Artist's commentary

  • Original
  • 卵かけご飯と私

    どうもはじめまして
    うまくち醤油 と申します

    九州や北陸以外の方には馴染みが薄いでしょうか
    口当たりが柔らかく甘味のある醤油です

    デイリー9位ですって!わーい!

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  • Comments
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    Rathurue
    over 9 years ago
    [hidden]

    One tablespoon of shoyu contains an average of 750mg of natrium. So yea, it can create severe health-related problem if you overused it.

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    Hoobajoob
    over 9 years ago
    [hidden]

    Rathurue said:

    natrium

    You mean salt?

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    279okshap
    over 9 years ago
    [hidden]

    Natrium = sodium. Hence symbol Na.

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    shiro123
    over 9 years ago
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    Tried that 2 days ago, no doubt that I'll be trying it again sometime.

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    NNescio
    over 9 years ago
    [hidden]

    279okshap said:

    Natrium = sodium. Hence symbol Na.

    In pseudo-Latin, however. This use has deprecated in modern English (it's generally only found in older technical texts).

    We don't call iron, tin, gold, and mercury as ferrum, stannum, aurum or hydrargyrum, now do we?

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    Rathurue
    over 9 years ago
    [hidden]

    NNescio said:

    In pseudo-Latin, however. This use has deprecated in modern English (it's generally only found in older technical texts).

    We don't call iron, tin, gold, and mercury as ferrum, stannum, aurum or hydrargyrum, now do we?

    Dangit, I've revealed my age! *tosses smoke bombs*

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    SumeragiAkeiko
    over 9 years ago
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    NNescio said:

    In pseudo-Latin, however. This use has deprecated in modern English (it's generally only found in older technical texts).

    We don't call iron, tin, gold, and mercury as ferrum, stannum, aurum or hydrargyrum, now do we?

    Except in Japan, they do say ナトリウム (Natoryumu, Natrium).

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    NNescio
    over 9 years ago
    [hidden]

    SumeragiAkeiko said:

    Except in Japan, they do say ナトリウム (Natoryumu, Natrium).

    But we weren't talking in Japanese, were we?

    (or German/Malay/Indonesian or a few other languages which just borrowed the Neo-Latin word.)

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    Seika
    over 9 years ago
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    Indonesian just use "salt" (in their native language). Makes it sound less poisonous.
    Probably from Indian vocabulary but not derived from Latin.

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    KowaiTeitoku
    over 9 years ago
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    Seika said:

    Indonesian just use "salt" (in their native language). Makes it sound less poisonous.
    Probably from Indian vocabulary but not derived from Latin.

    You mean 'Garam'? It's probably taken from latin's 'Garum', but...It's a different thing than salt, so...who knows?

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    NNescio
    over 9 years ago
    [hidden]

    Seika said:

    Indonesian just use "salt" (in their native language). Makes it sound less poisonous.
    Probably from Indian vocabulary but not derived from Latin.

    Garam can also refer to other salts (in the chemistry sense) though.

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    Akagi's
    Umakuchi Shouyu (Flavor Enhanced Soy Sauce)
    Kaga's
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