The spam that wipes out the pathetic little thing you call your desu.You're fucking desu, kid. As we speak I am contacting my secret network of desu across the USA and your desu is being traced right now so you better prepare for the spam, maggot. You think you can get away with saying that desu to me over the desu? Think again, desu. I will desu you the fuck out with desu the likes of which has never been seen on this desu, mark my fucking desu. I am trained in desu warfare and I'm the top desu in the entire US armed desu.You are nothing to me but just another desu. What the desu did you just fucking desu about me, you little desu? I'll have you know I graduated top of my desu in the Navy Desus, and I've been involved in numerous secret desus on Al-Desu, and i have over 300 confirmed desus. This has been depicted in many image macros and even flash videos such as 4Chan City – Craptastrophe. While originally spawned from a youtube fad, Gaston, a character from Disney's "Beauty and the Beast", is a commonly used counter spam to desu threads. But it's also used as a way to Threadjack, similar to Desu. It is commonly found on forums and imageboards where a person starts with a image macro featuring the phrase, whereas others follow. This has been combined with Desu, making the hello message end with Desu. "Moshi Moshi" is the Japanese way for saying "Hello" on the telephone. "Moshi Moshi X Desu" is a catchphrase commonly used in image macros with people picking up the phone. For example, on March 21st, 2007, YouTuber ShotaFujimori posted the video "DesUltimate – 527 DEATH combo," which received more than 1.5 million views in less than 14 years (shown below). There are also "combo-videos" where you can hear hundreds of unique utterances of desu one after another. Many people have found her obsessive need to be polite, even in cases where it may or may not be grammatically correct, to be peculiar. The character Suiseiseki from the anime series Rozen Maiden ends every sentence with desu. Image macros using the word desu or images of Suiseiseki are used commonly on 4chan by fans of anime (sometimes referred to by the derogatory term weeaboo ), and by those mocking them. One of the earliest available examples comes from April 12th, 2006 (shown below). Due to the tourettes-like nature of the word's primary usage, it was quickly adopted by /b/ users. The raid was started by the anime board, /a/, after users from /b/ staged a raid of their own. The earliest memetic usage of the word desu as a method of spam attack began in 2006 in a retaliatory forum raid on 4chan's random imageboard, /b/. In standard Tokyo dialect, the u in "desu" is not pronounced, as if it were spelled "des." The character of Suiseiseki pronounces the u, which is common in women in Northern Honshu and Hokkaido. The form desu is essentially the same as da except that it is used in a casual, but still polite or proper context. Other Japanese copulas are da, de, wa, na, and more. "This is Sushi" would be translated into "Kore wa sushi desu." and "I like Sushi" would be "Sushi ga suki desu") Due to the grammatical structure in Japanese, desu and verb tenses are used at the end of a sentence or phrase. Regardless of how it is used, its main function is to end sentences intended to be a statement. A close English approximation of this would be the words "this (that, he, she, it, etc) is" unless it's coupled with an adjective or a verb. The Japanese word desu is a copula, a word that links the subject of a sentence with the verb.
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