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how to write "welcome" in japanese
I want to say "welcome" to japanese people in my store " Welcome to our store"
or just "welcome"? Thank you |
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Or youkoso.
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I agree with the sentiment of what you're saying, but if you've got green eyes and light brown hair sometimes people will say yokoso ;) . That's only for really small stores though. The other 95% of the time it's always irashaimase. They'll never say yokoso to another Japanese person though.
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Also just いらっしゃい was said to me while I was there. Not that it is much different.
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I take it youkoso is the informal, got it, Thank you!
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If I have a shop I am going to say いっらしゃいませ. |
I don't know if this will make it any clearer, but Yokoso is like what you'd see when you enter a town or city or amusement parks (as MMM pointed out) and that kind of thing.
When you go to a store they say irashaimase, or some variation of that. When I said I've been told "yokoso" at certain small town shops I meant that those people were in a sense welcoming me to Japan because they probably just assume I'm here for a vacation or something like that. So while both of those words could be listed in a dictionary as "welcome", their usage is quite different. Another thing... I feel like I've heard "maido" when entering a small shop or cafe before though too. I've heard people use that when they answer the phone or when they want to say "thank you" and stuff like that... but I think I've heard it a couple of times where irashaimase would be said. People don't usually use maido around here so I don't really know the ins and outs of its usage. |
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Yea I always just assumed the kanji would be 毎度, so I had a good idea of what it meant. It's like "いつもお世話なってます".
So it is something they say when you enter a shop then? I'm pretty sure I heard it in a cafe in Osaka and at a weird back alley (pillows and things) type shop in Tokushima. Other than that, I don't recall hearing it when entering a shop. (although I've heard it used in other situations). I wonder if there are other words used for irashaimase in other dialects? Dialects a side, there are about a million different ways of saying "irashaimase!". |
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I am pretty sure that some of the comments made here are confising the OP more than helping him/her.
Just read the original question again! |
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