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∙ 11y ago日本見ã¦ãã ã•ã„ (nippon mite kudasai) - Please look at Japanç§ã¯æ—¥æœ¬å¤§å¥½ã (watashi wa nippon daisuki) - I love Japan
ã“ã‚Œã¯ç§ã®å¥½ããªè¨€èªžã§ã™ (kore wa watashi no suki na gengo desu) - This is my favorite language
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∙ 11y agoIt means 'My name is Daisuki , Or I am (called) Daisuki. Though, 'Daisuki' is usually spelt 'Daisuke'.
'watashi no koto wo wasurenaide kudasai' means Please don't forget me.
I love this picture (watashi wa kono e ga daisuki) 私はこの絵が大好き
Answer 私のメールください。 (Please mail me.)If you want to ask someone to do something for you in a respectful and polite but still obliging manner, use (word) kudasai. Your email (watashi no me-ru).Watashi no me-ru kudasai.
'Watashi ga koibito ni narasete kudasai.' (lit): (Let me become your lover) Replace kudasai with kure, yo, or kure yo; to make itcasual.
Casually: 私の子供が大好きだよ (Watashi no kodomo ga daisuki dayo) Politely: 私の子供が大好きです (Watashi no kodomo ga daisuki desu)
Edit: it means: "I love strawberries". Ichigo is also the name of an Anime character.
Impossible to assign a precise meaning without context, I believe it's from anime "Negima". I can only translate it partially;Suru (generally to do) > sareru (passive) > saremasu (formal passive)"Watashi WA futatabi Ayaka wo senshoushite kudasai" could mean:"Let me win the first round (or gain victory) over Ayaka again""Tokini" could mean 'occasionally, from time to time" or "by the way".
Watashi no (for a girl) Boku no (for a boy)
Please stay away from people like me.
'Watashi o mushishiteiru no WA yamete kudasai' is polite way of saying your sentence in Japanese.
"(Anata WA) bishounen dakedo watashi WA kami no hou ga daisuki" would be my interpretation.