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  • Honorific prefixes: 「ご」 vs 「お」 - Japanese Language Stack . . .
    ご両親りょうしん ご家族かぞく ご無事ぶじ ご安心あんしん ご丁寧ていねい While many others take the 「お」 prefix: お母さん お仕事しごと お月つきさま お家うち お客きゃく In general, what are the criteria that determine whether a noun takes a 「ご」 or an 「お」?
  • What is the difference in meaning between husband and wife
    I see that those two compounds mean husband and wife, as a married couple But is there a difference in usage or context?
  • usage - When is it appropriate to use ごくろうさま? - Japanese Language Stack . . .
    I've seen お疲れさま and ご苦労くろうさま used to say "Thank you" after some had done work of some type After reading the お疲れさま thread, I realize that the two are not interchangeable So when do you use ご苦労くろうさま? When is it appropriate to use otsukaresama?
  • Explanation of ambiguous gokigenyou - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
    ごきげんよう gokigen'yō ご (honorific prefix) きげん ("mood; tide") よう (old-fashioned form for よく, a conjugation † of よい) Altogether means "your mood (being) well", or practically "in good mood; in good shape" Why is it both a greeting and a farewell?
  • When would I use - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
    You might want to recheck your textbook or other source from which you got these - your first example should probably be さんじごじっぷん or さんじごじゅっぷん (not じゅうぷん) Anyway, the answer to your question involves a phenomenon called rendaku (連濁), sometimes translated as "sequential voicing" This answer has a good overview of the phenomenon
  • What does - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
    Now a problem arises when the word before して is a loanword because attaching the prefix ご to a loanword is usually unacceptable チェックしていただければ would become ごチェックいただければ, but this form sounds wrong Therefore one compromise may be to drop ご and say チェックいただければ
  • ありがとうございます - Japanese Language Stack Exchange
    There is one case where ありがとうございました is much more usual than ありがとうございます: when you close a talk by saying “Thank you for your attention,” the common (and I think formal) phrase is ご清聴ありがとうございました, not ご清聴ありがとうございます, although the action for which the
  • ~あらんことを: Slight Variations and Idiomatic Degree
    " 神のご加護があることを願っています " is a perfectly grammatical sentence which only uses the simplest contemporary grammar So it sounds businesslike and matter-of-fact as compared with " ご加護があらんことを ", which has a religious atmosphere EDIT: Note that 「~ があらんことを」 is a grandiose phrase


















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