Consonant sounds and 14 vowel sounds) Welcome to r/learnjapanese, *the* hub on reddit for learners of the japanese language. I am interested in japanese culture and the symbolism used in japan, specifically i'd like to know what the triangle, circle, ╳ cross and square mean to a japanese person This subreddit serves as a general hub to discuss most things japanese and exchange information, **as well as to guide users to subs specializing in things such as daily life, travel or language acquisition.** users are strongly encouraged to check the sidebar and stickied general questions thread before posting. This is a subreddit for people learning the japanese language A place where i hope you can feel welcome and learn something!!!
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? Unofficial subreddit for the band japanese breakfast. But i had a japanese native tell me it was more natural to use it with the verb 言う (polite form is 言います) So, to break it down, you're literally asking what is ~ called in japanese? or what do you say for ~ in japanese? 言う = to say と = grammatically necessary particle used with 言う to indicate a quotation. The japanese course on duolingo is mainly a word learning course
Assuming, you get each unit to max level, most words are gonna stick. I was in class the other day and my せんせい was teaching us about using ぐらい (gurai) as in. どの ぐらい かかりますか (how long will it take), and mentioned another form of ぐらい being ごろ (goro), and never elaborated on how or when to use it. Can anyone explain it to me?
OPEN