If you’re going to get a tattoo in a language you don’t speak, a quick Google search never hurts.

Ariana Grande appears to have overlooked this step, falling prey to a common tattoo fail ― inking incorrect Japanese kanji characters on the palm of her hand.

The pop star intended to permanently pay tribute to her new single “7 Rings” with some body art. Instead, she tattooed the word “shichirin,” which translates to a small Japanese-style charcoal grill.

The “thank u, next” singer debuted the new ink on Instagram Tuesday with a photo of her palm to commemorate the single and its record-breaking music video, which correctly featured the Japanese translation of “7 Rings”: 七つの指輪.

But fans were quick to point out that Grande’s new tattoo, without the three middle characters, takes on an entirely different meaning.

Ariana Grande’s new tattoo “七輪” means Japanese style bbq grill, not 7 rings. 😭 If you want to know about 七輪, just google “SHICHIRIN” pic.twitter.com/HuQM2EwI62 — *amo* (@hey__amo) January 30, 2019

for those who are confused, ariana grande got a tattoo on her hand in japanese intended to spell out “7 rings” and posted it on instagram (now deleted), but japanese people in the comments started saying how the REAL translation is bbq grill pic.twitter.com/rF0NvEa9Yv — Alice (@alice2096) January 30, 2019

“I’M SCREAMING did ariana grande really tattoo the japanese kanji of bbq grill on her hand SIS.... ” one fan wrote on Twitter.

“ariana grande getting an incorrectly google translated tattoo in japanese is karma for trying to user another culture as an accessory,” another added. “imagine tattooing bbq grill onto ur hand omg...”

Grande later scrubbed the image from her social media accounts, along with tweets responding to the misspelling.

She later explained that she “left out つの指 which should have gone in between” her tattoo characters in a pair of since-deleted tweets.

“It hurt like fuck n still looks tight. I wouldn’t have lasted one more symbol lmao. But this spot also peels a ton and won’t last so if I miss it enough I’ll suffer thru the whole thing next time,” she wrote.

“Also…. huge fan of tiny bbq grills,” she jokingly added.

Ariana Grande clarifies that she left out some letters off her tattoo because the pain was intolerable and says she’s a huge fan of tiny bbq grills which is one of the things her tattoo translates to! pic.twitter.com/SC1z4SSefW — Pop Alarms 🚨 (@PopAlarms) January 30, 2019

While Grande has only used Japanese in the promotion for her new single, the characters in Chinese roughly translate to “seven wheels” ― the two languages share characters, but have different meanings. A tweet from her official Japanese Twitter account, however, confirmed that her tattoo is intended to be read in Japanese. Grande has been on a Japanese ink kick as of late, adding a rather large arm tattoo of the Pokemon figure Eevee and the characters for “let’s sing” directly below it in recent months.

And, in case her new palm tattoo doesn’t fade, maybe a deal with a Japanese barbecue brand is within reach?

This story has been updated to include more details about Grande’s Japanese Twitter account.