>>12888269That is obviously a major troll. But for the fucks who will believe this, let's have a quick japanese lesson.
There are three "alphabets" in japanese, if you will. Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. SOMETIMES there is a fourth, known as Romaji, which is the latin alphabet.
What we're focused on is Katakana, which Gardevoir's name comes from. Katakana is the one that the japanese use to spell foreign words without using Romaji. Now let's break this shit down, shall we?
First of all, vowels. There are five. A, I, U, E, and O. The pronunciation of them NEVER EVER CHANGES, unlike in english.
>AAh
>IE
>UOooh
>Eeh
>OO
サーナイト
>サ + ーThe first character is Sa, and the second character used makes you prolong the pronunciation of the a in Sa. So it's pronounced Saa. The equivilent for the english 'Sir'.
>ナThis is the symbol for Na. So right now, we have Saa/Sir and Na.
>イKatakana for the japanese I. So now it should start to sound like Saa Na I, which souns like N-aye. So Aye, like what a fucking pirate would say. And put the N in front and you get Nigh.
>トJapanese for 'to'. Not 'to' as in "I'm going TO the market." but like what homer simpson says, if you were to replace the D in D'oh with a T, making T'oh.
So now we have saanaito. We've established that Saa is supposed to mean 'Sir' and now if we smash the na, i, and to together, what do we get? Naito, or Knight. Sirknight.