Difference between revisions of "MASK"
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Migi me Hidari me Migi te Hidari te Migi ashi Hidari ashi "Ku bi" | Migi me Hidari me Migi te Hidari te Migi ashi Hidari ashi "Ku bi" | ||
Hone Ase Namida Ketsueki Kokyū Shinkei Shunō mo "Zutazuta" | |||
Mahi suru made nomashi tsuzuke Hiru o nomasete " " | Mahi suru made nomashi tsuzuke Hiru o nomasete " " | ||
Yume o tachikirarete ikiteku dokusai shugi ni "Ku ru e" | Yume o tachikirarete ikiteku dokusai shugi ni "Ku ru e" | ||
Revision as of 17:35, 9 July 2017
| Lyrics | ||
|---|---|---|
| Japanese | Rōmaji | Translation |
苦痛重ねた日々 固めて有アスファルトに 「ウ メ テ」 |
Kutsū kasaneta hibi Katamete yū asufaruto ni "U me te" |
Put together the days of pain in asphalt. "bury" |
| These lyrics were translated by Jewels. | ||
Trivia
- The English line at the beginning of this song is "While its members have promised us peace, they have led us to war, heedless of the platform upon which they were elected." by Charles Lindbergh. In the famous speech Who are the War Agitators?, held in Des Moines, Iowa on 11 September 1941, he criticised the US government's intentions to participate in World War II. In his point of view, the three most important groups who have been pressing the country toward war are the British, the Jewish and the Roosevelt administration. The sentence used for MASK refers to the one named last.[1]