Generally speaking, after meals a Japanese person will say some form of ごちそうさまでした (gochisousama deshita) which can be translated as "Thank you for the meal", but can also mean "That was a delicious meal"/"I really enjoyed the meal". Before a meal, ごちそうになります (gochisou ni narimasu) can be said, to mean "Will be a treat" or "will be delicious", however it is more typical to say いただきます (itadakimasu) "Let's eat"*.
*いただく (itadaku) can be used as a humble form of the verb 食べる (taberu) which means "to eat".
'Kare ni chokoreeto wo kurete arigatou'.
Mazui.
Following words can be used to describe food in Japanese.sesshoku, shokuryou, fu-do, shokumotsu, meshifood in japanese= TabemonoTabemono 食べ物 is the Japanese word for food.
'Thank you for the flowers' in Japanese could be translated as 花をありがとう (hana o arigatou) or simply 花ありがとう (hana arigatou).
If you mean "food," tabemonoIf you mean an insect larva, uji.
To say old Japanese illustrations in Japanese, you say "Mukashi no Nihon no irasuto".
otta-gotto
In Japanese, you can say "Arigatou gozaimasu, LaPi-san" to say "Thank you, Mr. LaPi".
senkai arigato but Japanese would never say this just domo arigato gozaimashita is best
Arigatou gozaimasu = Thank you very much
よかった (yokata)
Japanese usually say "gochisosama" (which means "Thank you for the meal") after they eat.
By virtue of the fact that Japanese food is inherently Japanese, it would be fair to say that the people of Japan eat the most Japanese food.
"Takk for maten" (thank you for the food) You could say "takk for middag" (thank you for dinner), but "takk for maten" is the normal phrase.
You may say something like 'addo shite kurete arigato gozaimasu'.
you could possably say "Arigato Kuro Kuma" Arigato means thank you, Kuro means black, and Kuma means bear
You may say 'arigatou gozaimasu,' written in Japanese: ありがとうございます