It refers to the Jappanese Language Proficiency Test, or JLPT. The easiest version of the test is N5, and the hardest is N1.
Unboxious
Oh! Well then, I guess I should be more specific; earlier I left off the end of the manga's name. It's actually よつばと!. Here's a good write-up about what makes it a great first manga for a Japanese learner.
In my experience it was a bit easier getting started with Manga than going straight to VNs, though admittedly I've only played through one VN so maybe others are easier than the one I've tried. If you find VNs overwhelming I definitely recommend giving something like Yotsuba a go. I know a lot of people recommend it so maybe you're tired of hearing about it, but that's only because it's both funny and (relatively) easy.
Every friend I still keep in contact with is someone I met in college, so this makes a lot of sense to me.
And that's assuming that all 17 million mormons the LDS church claims to have actually exist. It's kind of annoying to get deleted from their rolls, so a lot of people who leave don't bother. Also, many of those 17 million live in much poorer nations than the US.
Okay, but what are the profits? That's what actually matters here.
The Way of the Househusband's anime adaptation was more of a voice-acted slideshow than an anime.
The Mob Psycho 100 manga's writing was excellent but the art was merely passable. Studio Bones took that simple artstyle and went absolutely nuts with it, turning it into one of the most beautifully-animated works I've ever seen.
You want hardware manufacturers to provide shitty screens in perpetuity just so Linux devs can avoid implementing proper scaling? Yeah, no.
Share the source next time. It's just common decency.
This really sucks; it's not good for the human body to be in microgravity for that long.
Very cute! This monthly pacing is killing me, but I'm sure it'll be lots of fun to re-read this all at once someday when it's complete.