Added: 3 years ago
From: WatchMojo
Views: 23,785
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  • Wow,she's really hot.

  • well japan is highly respected because of the fact that they well know how to be polite .and they add words like "nasai " or gazimasu " to show that they respect that person or they themselfs are just respectful :) like gomen nasai or ohiyogazimasu :)

  • rofl, all the corrections my comment got xD *failed*

  • watch japanese dramas and you can learn japanese much more easier :)

  • wow.. it is a fast video. she said too fast yea~ ok i am sorry to say this.

  • write in ROMANJI ofr cristh sake!! its easier to read it would be arigato gozaimasu.... not your freaking LONG WAY.... holy shit...

  • wow!!!! she's hot

  • wow that was fast and straight forward

  • yum, break me off a piece of that.

  • Theres a lot of ways that you can say "Thank you" in Japanese. It depends in where you live in Japan because many people say "Thank You" in many ways for example you can say Arigato, Domo, Domo Arigato, Arigato Gozaimasu, Okini and many more ways but those are the most used and most formal in Japan.

    Arigato Gozaimasu

  • wat she said was thank you very much

    if she had just said arigato then that wuld hav been just thank you

  • 'thanks!;D.

  • wat she said was thank u very mutch

  • the how to say "thank you for everything"?

    is it (iroiro arigatu..) or (eroiro arigato..)?

    XD

  • Hmm, not entirely sure, but I would go for Eroiro arigato.

  • sexy

  • arigoto is thank you.

    but adding the gozaimasu is for politeness(=

  • isn't "arigato gozaimasu" means thank you very much??

  • thank you is only arigato

  • its both and also: domo arigato

  • dosanu arigato checkinsho hahaha translate that

  • she confused me isnt it just arigato

  • Technically, she's saying "Thank you very much", not just thank you :]

  • ya thats what i thought too! atigato!

  • woot!, thank you for clearing that up there.

  • @sarcasticAzn77 actually she's using the formal version of thank you, like what u would use towards an adult or respectable person ;) sorry, i've been in Japanese for 3 years...

  • @poohluveralways ohhhhh, ok xD thanks for correcting me~ and you've been taking japanese for 3 years? luckyyyy, i wish i could take classes :3

  • @sarcasticAzn77 ha. np. :)

  • @sarcasticAzn77 no actually she said just "thank you", if she said arigatoo then it would be like in english "thanks"

  • @polzowatel Or you could say just plain, "Domo" to means thanks...It is a very casual and informal way of saying "thanks".

  • @Karenfan09 domo^^

  • @sarcasticAzn77 No, "gozaimasu" is the formal of saying thank you. Japan's a country of respect and manners. It is the norm to say it in the formal form in Japan. The only problem is that there is no direct translation in English.

  • @xximusiqkxx arigato gozaimasu is more polite way to say thank you.

  • @xximusiqkxx Japanese is confusing. Just go with it. You can say "thank-you" in many different ways.

  • @xximusiqkxx Arigato is thank you.

    The polite way, ''Thank you very much'' is Arigato gozaimasu (what she is saying)

  • She actually pronounced "gozaimasu" wrong. It's "go-zai-mas" without the "u".. she include the "u" for some strange reason.

  • It's not just her,I notice that alot when I hear ppl speak Japanese. I don't get it but I think it's one of those taMAEto taMAHto things

  • Which makes it more confusing ._.

  • Word, but so is English when you think about it hahaha

  • You can pronounce it both ways. For "desu/masu," sometimes Japanese don't pronounce the "u," sometimes they do. There may be a connotation to doing so but I don't know what it is.

    Nonetheless, both are acceptable.

    I'm currently living in Japan and hear both types frequently.

    I'll inquire about the connotative differences.

  • no she didnt, she said go-zai-mas not go-zai-ma-su

  • oh wait, yes she did. gomenasai my mistake

  • no she said orea- go- zai - mas- su

  • Ty ty, Arigato gozaimass.

  • Danke schoen

  • Merci

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