Install Free Gold Price Widget!
Install Free Gold Price Widget!
Install Free Gold Price Widget!
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- meaning - Difference between チケット, 切符 and 乗車券 - Japanese Language Stack . . .
チケット (chiketto) 切符 (kippu) 乗車券 (joushaken) All words mean ticket -Is there any difference among them? When is appropriate to use them or not? The only one thing I found yet, is that the last one means passenger ticket or train ticket in detail Are kippu chiketto inappropriate in use as train ticket or are they general enough?
- Why is there a tsu in Nippon (にっぽん)? [duplicate]
@Dave: Long quibbling: :) I think that you are right in that the end of the syllable に in word にっぽん is slightly different from the end of the syllable に in e g the sentence-end case
- When do you use the o marker with kudasai (Please)
nomithekid: You are basically saying, “You can omit を and say きっぷください in spoken Japanese in the real world, but because a textbook cannot show the real language, it must be a misprint if it appears in a textbook ”
- How did little tsu become a lengthener?
The usage of the small tsu っ to be used officially as a geminate consonant can be traced back to the Japanese government in 昭和六一年七月一日 (July 1st 1986(I believe))
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