First you play the role of li yang fang and then the role of Susan you partner Mike has and Kim sun you are at the airport to meet you visitor you know each other so great you visit first talk with him and then take him to the hotel. Pledged to meet you representative someone answe...
I tried to go back to the bar a week later for round two. The mom was there but the other chick wasn’t. I finally learned from some other chicks in the bar that some dude startedgiving her money to stop working in the bar. So she was in an apartment somewhere with some white du...
During my third year of college, my Japanese literature professor invited me to cheer on Haruki Murakami at the Boston Marathon with his departmental literature class, a class I’d taken the year before. The small group of us went in a few cars over to Heartbreak Hill, the brutal rising ...
How to say hello in Japanese depends on (取决于) when you say it. This is very much like different greetings in English at different times of the day or night. In Japanese culture, it also depends on whether (是否) you are on the phone or you are close to the person you are greeti...
Cheer in Japanese 頑張って!(Ganbatte– Try your best!) The most famous Japanese cheer is probably 頑張って (Ganbatte). It came from the verb 頑張(がんば)る meaning to persist and to try one’s best. This expression can be used almost in any situation when you want to cheer someone ...
Apparently the Japanese native checker at the JT wasn’t sure about my description of the エール, which is a pep rally-type cheer for a team/individual, and aftersleuthing on YouTubea bit, I’m starting to realize that エール are different everywhere. I also realized I left out an ...
乾杯(kanpai)is the Japanese drinking cheer. Even if the birthday party consists of underage people, it’s traditional to begin a celebration with a toast. In fact, it’s considered rude to eat before thekanpai.Drinking culture is a big part of Japanese celebrations, even if you’re only...
“Cheers” in Korean The word for “cheers” in the Korean language is건배 (geonbae). This means “empty glass,” so is similar to the expression “bottom’s up.” Japanese and Chinese speakers will notice the similarities between this word and the word for “cheers” in those langua...
HowdoyousayJapaneseinJapaneseHowdoyousayJapaneseinJapaneseGoodmorning!OuhayouGoodevening!KongbawaGoodnightOuyasiniHowareyou?KongnijiwaI'mback!A:tadayimaWaitaminute!Chinesephoneticpronunciation:madaiOldman!OujisangfatherChinesephoneticpronunciation:(ou)daosangsonMusigaoReally!Right?HongdouniIunderstand!WakadawaSorr...
and the witty but passionate grass-roots creative singer Xie Youcai made the audience cheer. In 2011, the "Journey of Adventure" party spent huge sums of money to build the country's first 3D performing arts stage. It was newly revised on September 30, 2013 and officially changed its name...