Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - What does Ogilvy mean?

What does Ogilvy mean?

Ogilvy sauce means "grandpa" in Japanese.

"Sauce" is a word derived from the Japanese suffix "ちゃん" (pronounced chan). No matter whether the speaker is male or female, and whether the other person is male or female, you can say this about the other person, but generally you can use "sauce" for people who are very close.

"ちゃん" is often used for lovely girls, which gives people a more intimate feeling, but it can be used not only for lovely girls, but also for other things, such as "red ちゃん" (meaning "baby") and "son cat".

Extended data:

In Japanese, unlike English, word order does not represent the grammatical function of nouns in sentences. Nouns don't change because of grammatical needs, just like some languages. Instead, function words after nouns are used to express grammatical functions.

What is important is が(ga) and は(ha), and the auxiliary words are pronounced as Wa), (o), に(ni) and の(no). The function word は (pronounced as wa when used as an auxiliary word) is particularly important because it marks the theme or theme of the sentence.

Verb inflections in Japanese can't reflect the person and the singular and plural. In modern Japanese, all verbs in modern Japanese dictionaries end with some U pseudonyms (ぅ, く, ぐ, す, む, つ, ぬ, も, も.

From this point of view, the verb "taberu" is like the prototype of the verb "eat" in English, although it is actually the simple present tense, meaning "eat"/"eats" or "will eat". Other forms of modification are "history"