Glad it clears up. I’m a chinese of another country and also got some very mild exposure toward japanese culture and language as well, so it’s kinda straight forward for me since the menu is full kanji and the wording is very prc chinese.
The text on the left is being translated as kanji but it’s very nonsensical so it’s possible the text on the left is chinese being translated as Japanese to English but the ¥ symbol on the right is definitely the Japanese yen
It is Chinese.
Source: am Chinese
¥ is the symbol for Japanese currency with the kanji being 円 (えん/en)
The “y” is added in the English translation
Source: I’m learning Japanese and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_yen
The sign is used for both yen and yuan.
source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yen_and_yuan_sign
I was not aware of that
Glad it clears up. I’m a chinese of another country and also got some very mild exposure toward japanese culture and language as well, so it’s kinda straight forward for me since the menu is full kanji and the wording is very prc chinese.
It’s the difference between being Chinese and learning Japanese I guess. Though I’m neither.
Edit: sorry, that was a bit blunt. I’m not saying you did anything wrong, anyone can have a blind spot in their knowledge.
The text on the left is being translated as kanji but it’s very nonsensical so it’s possible the text on the left is chinese being translated as Japanese to English but the ¥ symbol on the right is definitely the Japanese yen
https://jpdb.io/search?q=骨肉相连&lang=english#a
But the ¥ symbol is used for both yen and yuan.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renminbi
Off topic: Do you mean that you want to make love to him or that you want to ruin things for him?
🤔
Well, I guess a lot of signs get reused … same for the pesos sign $