This thread is for the discussion of the language, culture, travel, daily life, etc. of Japan. Let's chat at random in Japanese and English. Take it easy!
Je ne parlerai pas français dans le salle de chat alors invite-moi. Ne sois pas raciste Dieu aime pas ça. Je veux discuter avec ces sympas japonais sans l'Allemand chelou me lire à travers Google traducteur.
Nicholas Robinson
これ本当?
Kayden Collins
Et les japonais seront plus habitués avec Line Chatrooms.
Reminds me of when I went to Okinawa and the おじいさん who talked to me while guiding me to Naha downtown told me that I shouldn't go to that restaurant there because it was a Chinese restaurant and it was bad. Also, the way he talked about how Okinawaians don't work when it's too hot and prefer staying at home (he kinda implied that they were lazy) was funny too.
Luke Gutierrez
Is okinawa nice, can someone who doesnt know japanese go there
Andrew Rivera
実は以前に作って招待したけど、アカウントが面倒とかで日本人が全然来てくれなかった
Grayson Cruz
私の人生で黒人を一度しか見えなかった
Dylan Baker
まあいい人は多いよ あと意外とメシがうまい
Nathan Evans
>Is Okinawa nice Sure it is. But if you plan to go during the summer, you'll probably have it a bit hard if you're not accustomed to heat.
>can someone who doesnt know japanese go there I'd like to tell you you could easily but it's not exactly the case. Of course, Naha has English stuff and all, but if you should at least learn some useful sentences. That said, the main attractions are in English.
Jordan King
it seems to me that english teacher tried to speak bad english
Parker Cruz
>you'll probably have it a bit hard if you're not accustomed to heat. well i live in Rio so i am >That said, the main attractions are in English. and are there public beaches or do you need to stay in those hotels?
>落とし玉 You know, there are ways to verify the writing of nouns you aren't sure of. ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/お年玉
Eli Nelson
「落とし玉」というゲーム
Isaac Phillips
>Warszawaにいた時McDonaldsでフリップ履いていたアジア人の三人 を見ました
Andrew Mitchell
日本でインターンシップしたい どうすればいい
Wyatt Cruz
Do japaneses trust to police and policemans? How are views on policemans work in Japan
Luis Sanchez
working holyday . but I don't recomender work in japan . japan is hell about work .
Gabriel Nguyen
日本に行って履歴書振り回す
Isaac Rogers
Can someone roughly summarize me what she's saying in the first 5 minutes? It sounds like there's "rubbing" noises, but she talks normally, so i wonder what she's doing
終わらせる is like make it finished. 終わる is like "sth ends".
Owen Ramirez
*people force or influence something
Nathaniel Cook
why can't nips into pc?
Carter Brown
mé ont kon tie nu de luïe dô n'aient date hension sais pâtées tick ait dôme âges
Sebastian Martin
書いてみる嫌読まれる事してグーグル利用なら方法あるだの無視の文法
Matthew Wright
日本人ブス
Blake Gutierrez
日本人美女
Lucas Hill
普通に売られてるだね
Adam Gutierrez
Uugh
Andrew Parker
I play games from Steam on my pc myself.
But Japan's ordinary consumers are very passive and lack the constructive mentality to give feedback to the suppliers/providers/manufacturers and make the product better unlike American consumers. So if they find bugs or failure of the software, they'd cause hysteria and accuse the software/hardware manufacturer and demand the refund. I think this is why PC games don't become popular here. Ordinary Japanese can't handle the unexpected troubles.
Isaiah Anderson
まだ日本語を勉強していますからエラーがあれば許してください。
電気工学生徒です。
日本に工学仕事がありますか。それあれば、その分野に外人は勤められる?
Henry Sanchez
You would think Japanese would be more level-headed about it and ask for a fix.
you'd better think about why the japanese who was awarded a Nobel prize study in usa
Nathan Parker
*studying
Mason Diaz
もちろん、でも半年間しか勉強しています。時とともにどんどん上達します。
そうですね。どっちみち答えをありがとう。
I don't want to study in Japan, I am curious about working there once I graduate. I am aware that Japan is a difficult place to make a living, I just want to know if it's realistic for a foreigner to find work in Electrical Engineering there.
Carter Jenkins
Sony is a bitch
Parker Baker
gâché
Dylan White
There was a site of NPO where foreign recruitment information can be seen in the language of 53 countries here. 国際留学生協会(International Foreign Student Association)
※Please click on "英語" in "言語を選択" on the upper left
Matthew Rivera
hey do you want to be friends again?
Ryder Butler
Just a quick question that sprung to my mind on the way home from work.
In English, say I am giving my friend a tour of the neighbourhood and point to a house across the other side of the road and say "This is my house." this can be correct, but I can also say "That is my house.". There's a nuance there, but in English we really can use these two words interchangeably when objects are at a 'reasonable' distance from us.
I know Japanese has Ko,So,A,Do words that work similarly. But can I ever use これ / この to refer to a house across the street? Or would that always have to be あれ/あの?
Aaron Carter
>In Japanese, it is considered to be impolite to say 'you' at all under most situations. You should always use the person's name (last name preferably) along with the appropriate suffix (-san, -kun, -chan, -shachou, -sama, etc) instead of 'you'.
>If you HAVE to use the word for 'you', the better one to use is 'anata' in most situations.
>'Kimi' is manspeak, and you should only use it with close male friends, for your girlfriend, younger family members, young kids, etc. Don't use it in most other situations, especially someone older than yourself.
>Either way, strive to avoid using the word 'you' whenever you can. And NEVER use 'anata' or 'kimi' with your boss. It is very rude!
Is this Yahoo Answers comment true or no? I've noticed some anime characters (like suzuha from steins;gate) always use a person's name instead of "you"
I saw 2 Japanese koreaboo girls in Seoul. they were 150cm and had colored hair and weird outfits then one said gaijin and I knew they were talking about me so I invited them to my hotel room and had a threesome (in my head)