doomo means "very" and arigatoo means "thank you"
gozaimasu makes it "formal".
If you were thanking your sensei/someone you respect or someone you do not know very well you would say doomo arigato gozaimasu.
for just your friends, doomo arigatoo or arigatoo would suffice.
When writing these phrases in Japanese make sure you use kanji for formal and hiragana for informal. doomo arigatoo gozaimasu would be written using kanji, and when addressing a friend you would use hiragana.
shashi wo arigato gozaimasu
AnswerDomo Arigatou Gozaimasu. Or just Arigatou Gozaimasu.Or Arigato gozai-mas.Or Arigato gozai-mashitaAnything beyound plain old "Arigatou" starts getting pretty flowery, and social structure becomes a part in it. For instance, it would be bad manners for a manager to say "arigato gozai-mashita" to one of his staff under normal circumstances."Domo" is "Thanks" and works well between equals.Domo Arigato (doe-moe ar-ee-got-oe)I've never heard anybody say "Domo arigato" to say thank you. Well, except in that song. To avoid confusion, I usually say "Arigato gozaimasu" when saying thank you in Japanese. Or just "arigato," but that is like saying 'thanks,' where as 'arigato gozaimasu' is 'thank you very much.'AnswerActually im pretty sure its domo arigatou
"どうもありがとうございます." Doumo arigatou gozaimasu.
Domo arigato means thank you (polite form). Domo is the weakest form of thank you, more polite than that it is domo arigato, and the most polite form would be domo arigato gozaimasu/domo arigato gozaimashita. (do-mo al-ee-gato go-zai-moss) (do-mo al-ee-gato go-zai-mash-ee-ta, note that the "ee" in "mash-ee-ta" is pronounced so quick it isnt heard, so pronounce it like "go-zai-mash-ta")
its "Ohayo gozaimasu. Ogenki desu ka?"
Gozaimashita is the past form of it.
shashi wo arigato gozaimasu
The Japanese of "thank you" is Arigato Gozaimas/Arigato/Arigato GozaimasuThe Japanese of "thank you very much" is Domo Arigato Gozaimas/Domo Arigato/Domo Arigato Gozaimasu...(note: If you want to use a Japanese language in a sentence, use desu to make it more generous =] hehe! )
AnswerDomo Arigatou Gozaimasu. Or just Arigatou Gozaimasu.Or Arigato gozai-mas.Or Arigato gozai-mashitaAnything beyound plain old "Arigatou" starts getting pretty flowery, and social structure becomes a part in it. For instance, it would be bad manners for a manager to say "arigato gozai-mashita" to one of his staff under normal circumstances."Domo" is "Thanks" and works well between equals.Domo Arigato (doe-moe ar-ee-got-oe)I've never heard anybody say "Domo arigato" to say thank you. Well, except in that song. To avoid confusion, I usually say "Arigato gozaimasu" when saying thank you in Japanese. Or just "arigato," but that is like saying 'thanks,' where as 'arigato gozaimasu' is 'thank you very much.'AnswerActually im pretty sure its domo arigatou
thank you = arigato gozaimasu good bye= sayo nara
You may say something like 'addo shite kurete arigato gozaimasu'.
The correct phrase is "Arigato gozaimasu" which means "Thank you very much" in Japanese.
"Arigato gozaimashitai" is not a complete phrase in Japanese. "Arigato gozaimasu" means "thank you" in a polite form. Adding "tai" at the end is incorrect and does not have a specific meaning in Japanese.
"Arigatou gozaimasu" is the phrase for "thank you so much" in Japanese.
Yes... me.... I have the yellow band and three stars. I'm studying it in the Nederlands. Arigato gozaimasu for this question.
Thanks again translates to Japanese to be saido, kansha shimasu.
I'm not exactly sure, but 'otanjoubi' means birthday and 'doumo arigato gozaimasu' means thanks, so it probably means 'thank you for the birthday card'? Not sure...