Talk:Re: Chapter 64/@comment-179.96.149.202-20160214150504/@comment-94.219.205.52-20160214230809

Actually Haise or "heiße" in German is used for phrases like "Ich heiße Sara." (My name is Sara.) Its the first person simple present form of 'heißen' which doesnt have a proper translation, but is something like 'to be named', so its "I am named Sara." Also its an adjective meaning 'hot' as in warm. Examples would be "heiße Suppe" (hot soup) or "heiße Gabel" (hot fork). Both "Suppe" and "Gabel" are femininum, female, so we Germans use "die" the feminin equivalent if 'the' which in English has no gender designation. In German there is 'der' (male), 'die' (female) and 'das' (neutral). The adjective is used in a feminin context so its 'heiße'. Male would be 'heißer" and neutral "heißes". So the phonetic 'Haise' of Ishida to "heiße" in German is not 'nameless'. Its actually just a conjugated form of the German verb for 'to be named' or even more absurd a declinated form of the German verb for 'hot'

Anyways, hope its helping a bit... I've got no idea where the 'nameless' could have sprouted from.