If Japan won WWII, why would they write from right to left and in kyujitai form?

If Japan won WWII, why would they write from right to left and in kyujitai form? - From above chalkboard with THERE COMES A TIME WHEN SILENCE IS BETRAYAL inscription on black background

Can someone please expound the following comment based on the screenshot below? I don't speak Japanese, so please forgive my benightedness. How does Japan's imaginary winning World War II affect Japanese's

  1. written word order?

  2. kyujitai form?

0:22 the Japanese on the soldiers’ hats were written from right to left and in kyujitai form (國 instead of 国). Such changes would’ve never happened had Japan not been defeated as seen here. I love the attention to details in this show.

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Pictures about "If Japan won WWII, why would they write from right to left and in kyujitai form?"

If Japan won WWII, why would they write from right to left and in kyujitai form? - Chalkboard with white We See You inscription
If Japan won WWII, why would they write from right to left and in kyujitai form? - From above wooden frame with texture background and white caption on center on black background
If Japan won WWII, why would they write from right to left and in kyujitai form? - Black chalkboard with inscription on black background



Is Kyujitai still used?

Therefore, ky\u016bjitai are still used in personal names in Japan today (see jinmeiy\u014d kanji). In modern Japanese, ky\u016bjitai that appear in the official spelling of proper names are sometimes replaced with the modern shinjitai form.

What if Japan won ww2?

In Japanese, there are no spaces between words, so kanji helps break words apart, making it easy to read. As I'm sure you can imagine, long sentences would get even more difficult to read, and when you don't know where one word begins and another one ends, reading errors can occur.

Why do Japanese use kanji?

The oldest written kanji in Japan discovered so far were written in ink on wood as a wooden strip dated to the 7th century, a record of trading for cloth and salt. The Japanese language had no written form at the time Chinese characters were introduced, and texts were written and read only in Chinese.



What if Japan Never Attacked Pearl Harbor?




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Images: Brett Sayles, Brett Sayles, Brett Sayles, Brett Sayles