WHAT DOES "BAKA KA" MEAN?!?

greenspun.com : LUSENET : Animes : One Thread

My goddamn bastard of a friend keeps yelling that...mainly at me... -juss wanna know what it means, so i can go kick his ass... I'm okay though, 'cuz i call him names in cambodian he doesn't understand... (he'd be asking: what does "sapung" mean?!) hehe...

-- Anonymous, July 26, 2003

Answers

"baka" means idiot. "ka" is the english equivalent of a question mark. so basically, "are you an idiot?"

-- Anonymous, July 26, 2003

Hey! thanks so much!!! now i'm on my way to beat the crap outta that sapung (it means slut. hehe.) as an answer to his question! *Tra la La la...*

-- Anonymous, July 26, 2003

"ka" actually has a bunch of meaning (beautiful among others; "beautiful idiot"?)... anyway... here's what the dictionary says:

"ka" - beautiful, good, excellent, department, section, mosquito, passable, price, cost, value, worth, valence?, question mark

"baka" - fool (an,id), foolish, idiot, trivial matter

I'd still tip on the question mark tho :P

-- Anonymous, July 26, 2003


I know Japanese and its probably asking if they are a fool. Like "Are you a fool?" or something like that.

-- Anonymous, July 27, 2003

I have a filipino friend that says something like that: Bakala. He says it means a fag or homo. But thats only if your friend is filipino. (i dont know if 'filipino' is correct usage)

-- Anonymous, July 27, 2003


It's 'bakla' and 'Filipino' is the right usage.

"Bakla ka" means "You are gay" in Filipino.

-- Anonymous, July 28, 2003


Tagalog to be more exact.

-- Anonymous, July 28, 2003

actully it does mean beatiful idiot. He probally meant it to be 'are you an idiot' but he's bad at Japanese...The verb goes after the subject so if you wanted to say ae you an idot you'd say Baka ne (witch directly means Fool,right?)..... He should learn more Japanesae before throwing it around.

-- Anonymous, August 16, 2003

umm... thing is, he DOES speak japanese... in fact, he IS japanese.

-- Anonymous, August 17, 2003

Moderation questions? read the FAQ