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Hi, | |||
by milky way |
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Do you mean the response you would give someone who said that to you. Well if someone says I love you, I guess the most common thing to say is I love you too which is "anata mo daisuki desu" but if you don't love them, you could say sorry in a entle way which is "gomen ne". Good luck, hope this helps. | |||
by Christine | rate this post as useful |
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I love you too which is "anata mo daisuki desu" "anata mo daisuki desu" means "I love you too (as well as I love another person)". If you mean "I love you too (as well as you love me)", say "watashi mo (anata ga) daisuki desu". | |||
by meringue4 | rate this post as useful |
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aishteru means I love you.. while daisuki means the same thing...or maybe its i like you~ not sure~ | |||
by Hikari | rate this post as useful |
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Both aishteru and daisuki mean "I love you". how different? aishteru is a very formal expression, I guess? and daisuki can be either "I love you" or "I like you". btw "Duh`" is a russian word that means yes? or nyet? | |||
by lala | rate this post as useful |
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Hi. I'm Japanese college student living in Japan. (I gotta say that "anata mo aishiteiru" posted above by another guy is wrong...."anata mo aishiteimasu." means "You love me, too.",which is inappropriate for this situation.) If you don't like she does, I think you might as well show your sincerity, saying "Sorry." or something. :) I'll leave my e-mail addy so that you can ask me when you get another prob in Japanese language :) hazel | |||
by Hazel | rate this post as useful |
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Hazel, | |||
by milky way | rate this post as useful |
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hi hazel, | |||
by rouge | rate this post as useful |
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I love Hazel (^_^) | |||
by Jason | rate this post as useful |
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hi hazel, could u tell me ur email adress? | |||
by k | rate this post as useful |
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hey, i saw my ex's info that says daisuki itsumo, im wondering what that means? got any clue thnx! | |||
by Atticus | rate this post as useful |
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Atticus- | |||
by Luna | rate this post as useful |
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What does boku mean? xP .... like.. i'm going for hazel's advice..and like... she put- watashi (boku) mo aishiteimasu-- but.. i have no idea what boku means... does it mean ''it''? | |||
by Helllllpppppp | rate this post as useful |
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Boku is just the casual way of saying watashi and is mainly used by boys/guys though some tomboy girls also like to use it. | |||
by Mark | rate this post as useful |
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One of my girlfriends used to call herself Boku. She told me it is not regular, but she just wanted to use it. It is only for guys she explained. | |||
by Rouge2 | rate this post as useful |
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how to say "i miss you" in japanese language? | |||
by dianne | rate this post as useful |
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Somebody said `Anatamo Daisuki desu` is I love too, but can I correct it?? Instead of `Aanatamo`, we use `Watashi mo Anata ga Daisuki`. | |||
by Japanese | rate this post as useful |
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I miss you | |||
by ** | rate this post as useful |
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the above is correct. they dont really say miss in japanese. though u¢vis used a lot too. | |||
by kasuga | rate this post as useful |
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instead of saying "watashi mo anata ga suki desu" "watashi mo" should work better. after all, when someone says "i love you" for the first time, do you say "i love you too" sounds akward to me, id say " i do to'. on a further note, saying i lvoe you on a daily basis (though you shouldnt do this in japanese) is just u¤µÄéæv@ completely off topic, but ¤@Is really fun to write, if you know how.@^_~ | |||
by kasuga | rate this post as useful |
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