It's certainly clear.

ObitobiLoL

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Ok so at the end kakashi is saying "...You are..." Follow by "...Obito...?"

I don't understand how, but some people cannot read between the lines.

Kakashi IS NOT, asking if the man is Obito. He is suprised, just like when you see someone who you have not seen in a while. Example: girl "A" walks by, you stop and stare and in your head you say "Helen...?" Even though you are saying it in a questioning way, you already know it is indeed "Helen" however you question it since you have not seen this person in such a long time.

Okay so now that the line is debunked, we can now move onto another OBVIOUS line kishi left.

Its finally revealed the mans name is OBITO! Now it's settled Tobi is simply Obito.

Sorry I made a thread just for this, but all I see is people bashing others because they don't understand what kakashi had said is more of a statement rather than a question. Its a twist on the sentence.

Now do not try to bash me and say "A statment cannot have a question mark!" Oh my friend it can, here is a description of a statement turned into a question mark.

"Use a question mark [ ? ] at the end of a direct question. It is considered bad form to use a question mark in combination with other marks, although that is often done in informal prose in an attempt to convey complex tones: He told you what!? That combination (or similar combination) of punctuation marks is sometimes called an interrobang, but the interrobang currently has no role in academic prose.*

A tag question is a device used to turn a statement into a question. It nearly always consists of a pronoun, a helping verb, and sometimes the word not. Although it begins as a statement, the tag question prevails when it comes to the end-mark: use a question mark.
Notice that when the statement is positive, the tag question is expressed in the negative; when the statement is negative, the tag question is positive. (There are a few exceptions to this, frequently expressing an element of surprise or sarcasm: "So you've made your first million, have you?" "Oh, that's your plan, is it?")

The following are more typical tag questions:
He should quit smoking, shouldn't he?
He shouldn't have quit his diet, should he?
They're not doing very well, are they?
He finished on time, didn't he?
She does a beautiful job, doesn't she?
Harold may come along, mightn't he?
 
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