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- index startersguide - LearnJapanese - Reddit
What is Japanese? Japanese is the national language of Japan and its people According to Ethnologue, Japanese is the 9th largest language in the world by number of speakers with 122 million speakers in 25 countries
- The many ways to say and in Japanese
In English, we just have one word for the conjunction and which works just fine for many categories, but in Japanese, there are separate words: と joins nouns together in a closed list や joins nouns
- Girlfriend (boyfriend), lover, SO: - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
I have studied [very basic level] that 恋人こいびと is girlfriend (or boyfriend), but also that 彼かれ is "he; boyfriend" and that 彼女かのじょ is "she; girlfriend" I've checked jisho, and indeed the definitions are correct, but the example sentences it provides haven't helped at all to see the differences between these words Can they be used interchangeably or are there
- Is the english xoxo related to japanese メロメロ
So I stumbled over the Japanese word メロメロ (mero mero) wich is often translated as being in love I was wondering if it is related to the english xoxo (hugs and kisses) or is this just a coincidence?
- What is the meaning of all those ws in email and SNSs?
www is Internet slang like lol in Japanese It stands for warai (笑い), often used on online message boards 笑 is like www, it's another internet slang, like lol in Japanese You will also see people adding 笑 at the end of sentences on the Internet just like the example you gave
- Japanese え sound - [ɛ] or [e]? - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
Japanese, a language which has 3-level vowel height system, does not have the distinction of e and ɛ Or speaking more correctly, Japanese え and お are (true) mid vowels, that their sweet spots fall just midway of theoretical [e] and [ɛ]
- Differences among - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
The Japanese language has a lot of patterns for "if" clauses What are the differences among the following patterns and how do we choose to use one over the others?: 行くと 行ったら 行くなら 行けば 行くんだったら 行くのなら
- How do you say the in japanese?
That's the case in Japanese: the articles "the" and "a" do not exist In order for you to think about a sentence in those terms, you would have to deduce the article from context I found a little example here: Definiteness of Nouns In Japanese, the definiteness and plurality of a noun is implicit
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