Talk:Unnamed Daimyō

Kusagakure?
He sent the Grass ninjas after Gaara and they called him - "sir". They are from the Land of Grass so why we don't put that this daimyo is from there?--Donatelo (talk) 21:38, November 28, 2009 (UTC)
 * Because he might not be from the Land of Grass. --ShounenSuki (talk 21:56, November 28, 2009 (UTC)


 * Must be from the Land of Grass, 'cause why else would those Shinobi call him 'Sir' or follow his orders or even be there if not to protect him? Don't say 'to protect the nobles', 'cause this is the Village Hidden in the Leaves. It has its own Shinobi to protect them, encludin' the SAATS (that's the ANBU Black Ops if you're wonderin', that should be their right name in the English dub, SAATS stands to its litteral meanin', Special Assassination and Tactical Squad). X29 September 4 04:15 2011.


 * Wow, you replied to a two-year-old discussion… Well, regardless: they would probably call any and every daimyō 'sir', even if they weren't from the same country. It's called respect for authority and it's still pretty big in Japan. They'd follow a foreign daimyō's orders for a very simple reason: money. —ShounenSuki (talk 01:37, September 4, 2011 (UTC)

Come on. You really can't expect Jonin to be this cheap, now do you? An' for respect for the Feudal Lord, they should just say 'Feudal Lord'. I heard some characters say this (at least in the anime, in part obe, 'cause that's all i saw). An' I know it's been a long time since the last comment, but I still have to add somethin'. X29 September 4 04:53 2011.
 * How do you expect jōnin — if they even were jōnin — to earn a living? Doing missions for others is what they do. The daimyō could be from a country without its own shinobi, explaining why he'd hire Kusanin. Calling a daimyō 'sir' sound pretty normal to me. I can't say anything substantial about it without knowing what they say in Japanese, though. —ShounenSuki (talk 16:08, September 4, 2011 (UTC)