putting up your pinkie finger
Insulted is the past participle of insult.
The abstract noun for insult is "insultation."
When you insult someone, you hurt their feelings.
His insult is more demeaning to the him than it is to me.
The insult to my integrity made me very angry.
Baka it means idiot
You can insult someone in Japanese in the same way that you insult people in other languages: by implying that they are socially undesirable, that they are unfit for or unable to do some desirable task, and so forth: in short, by denigrating them. There are various ways to do this in Japanese that are not possible in all other languages: examples include (in contrast with English): (i) addressing the insultee with the wrong kind of grammar (Japanese being marked for the relative social positions of interlocutors) or lexical items; and (ii) leaving out otherwise obligatory honorifics (such as -san affixed to names) or using the incorrect honorifics or forms of address.
Insult is a noun (an insult) and a verb (to insult).
Just a Rivalry, no more, no less. Actually in a more detailed explanation , the word "ino" means boar in Japanese so sakura uses the word "pig" as a suffix as supposed to "san" or "Chan" to insult Ino
The word 'insult' is both a noun (insult, insults) and a verb (insult, insults, insulting, insulted).Examples:Look, a two dollar tip. That is an insult. (noun)You can't insult someone with that large an ego. (verb)
Wareware WA chippu o ukeireru if you are not in japan you may get away with saying this but in japan it may be considered an insult
The word 'insult' is both a verb (insult, insults, insulting, insulted) and a noun (insult, insults). Example uses: Verb: Don't insult the cashier, she doesn't set the prices. Noun: The insult was not deserved and it hurt their feelings.
The word チビ (chibi) is sometimes used as an insult or term of endearment in Japanese. チビ may mean 'dwarf', 'midget', 'pipsqueak', 'small fry' and other things along those lines.
The opposite of an insult is a compliment.
Insulted is the past participle of insult.
You added insult to injury!I felt like that was an insult to my intelligence.You shouldn't insult other people.
The noun 'insult' can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'insult' is it.Example uses:The insult didn't seem to phase him. (subject of the sentence)You can't predict the response that an insult will produce. (subject of the relative clause)Habitual drinking caused an insult to his liver. (direct object of the verb 'caused')You don't have to respond to an insult. (object of the preposition 'to')The insult was lame. It made me laugh. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'insult' in the second sentence)The word 'insult' is also a verb: insult, insults, insulting, insulted.