Post number #254170, ID: 2cce54
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Pretty sure it's just a sound effect. IIRC "tu" is only really used in Japanese to recreate words from other languages and or in this case sound effects
Post number #254184, ID: a0616f
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actually "Tu" (トゥ) sound is really uncommon in Japanese which makes it amusing
Post number #254239, ID: 8343c6
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Means nothing, just an amusing thing that Mayushi uses as a greeting
Post number #254558, ID: 07acb5
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I always thought it sounded like a fanfare
Post number #254733, ID: 5e7cf4
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So its an onomatopoeia
Post number #254840, ID: 591061
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Isn't she imitating a trumpet fanfare? Or perhaps the cutesy jingles all electronics in Asia seem to make?
Post number #254968, ID: 38c3ca
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Maybe it's supposed to sound like "toodaloo" but she dosn't realize that means goodbye, so she uses it as a greeting
Post number #255188, ID: 8e6a6a
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Mayushi the Tank Engine
Post number #255364, ID: 1c9277
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It means the cutie has arrived.
Post number #255595, ID: b4ee0f
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It is clearly the meanibg of life
Post number #255728, ID: 8ba053
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It sounds like tötörö which is the German sound for an elephant
Total number of posts: 14,
last modified on:
Fri Jan 1 00:00:00 1524514173
| Is it just something Mayushi says or does it actually mean something?