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Uzakdoğu vatandaşları fotoğraf çekilirken neden zafer işareti yaparlar?
Soru açık. Çoğu neden bu hareketi yapıyor acaba bilen var mı?

pkkyı destekliyorlar
- madagaskar
(02.05.10 21:48:25)

1- 1972 olimpiyatlari sirasinda bir sporcu kayarken dusmus, ama gulumsemeye devam ederken bu hareketi yapmis, bundan sonra japon halki bu kizimizi cok sevmis ve izlemis, bu kuz zafer isareti yapar dururmus.
2- Konica fotograf makinasi ayni isareti reklamlarinda kullanmis (bunun etkisi cok olmali)
3- zafer isareti olan V ayrica 2 sayisini da temsil ediyomus, iki'nin japoncadaki okunusu "ni" imis, gulme kelimesi de ni- ile basliyormus. bu yuzden bir yandan da gulmeyi temsil ediyomus.
One account of the V sign's use in portrait photographs claims that during the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Hokkaidō figure skater Janet Lynn stumbled into Japanese pop culture when she fell during a free-skate period—but continued to smile even as she sat on the ice. Though she placed only third in the actual competition, her cheerful diligence and indefatigability resonated with many Japanese viewers, making her an overnight celebrity in Japan. Afterwards, Lynn (a peace activist) was repeatedly seen flashing the V sign in the Japanese media. Though the V sign was known of in Japan prior to Lynn's use of it there (from the post-WWII Allied occupation of Japan), she is credited by some Japanese for having popularized its use in amateur photographs.[25] According to another theory, the V sign was popularized by the actor and singer Jun Inoue, who showed it in a Konica photo camera commercial in 1972. Japanese may also be associating with their onomatopoeia (gitaigo) for smiling. The number "two" is "ni" in Japanese, and the onomatopoeia for smiling generally begins with the sound "ni-", such as "niko niko" or "niya niya." [26]
en.wikipedia.org
2- Konica fotograf makinasi ayni isareti reklamlarinda kullanmis (bunun etkisi cok olmali)
3- zafer isareti olan V ayrica 2 sayisini da temsil ediyomus, iki'nin japoncadaki okunusu "ni" imis, gulme kelimesi de ni- ile basliyormus. bu yuzden bir yandan da gulmeyi temsil ediyomus.
One account of the V sign's use in portrait photographs claims that during the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Hokkaidō figure skater Janet Lynn stumbled into Japanese pop culture when she fell during a free-skate period—but continued to smile even as she sat on the ice. Though she placed only third in the actual competition, her cheerful diligence and indefatigability resonated with many Japanese viewers, making her an overnight celebrity in Japan. Afterwards, Lynn (a peace activist) was repeatedly seen flashing the V sign in the Japanese media. Though the V sign was known of in Japan prior to Lynn's use of it there (from the post-WWII Allied occupation of Japan), she is credited by some Japanese for having popularized its use in amateur photographs.[25] According to another theory, the V sign was popularized by the actor and singer Jun Inoue, who showed it in a Konica photo camera commercial in 1972. Japanese may also be associating with their onomatopoeia (gitaigo) for smiling. The number "two" is "ni" in Japanese, and the onomatopoeia for smiling generally begins with the sound "ni-", such as "niko niko" or "niya niya." [26]
en.wikipedia.org
- cench
(02.05.10 21:55:57)

teşekkürler cench..
- kus
(02.05.10 22:02:14)
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