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いいえ, or iie. "No" is written in hiragana, one of the three Japanese alphabets, apposed to kanji or katakana.
いや - iya なし - nashi

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While "iya" is technically a way of saying no, it's more of an exclamatory, distressed, or very adamant "no", and not something you'd say for a regular no. "Nashi" isn't "no", but rather "none".

In everyday use, no would be either:

"iie" (いいえ ) (EE-yeh) or "dame" (ダメ) (DAH-meh). If you are talking to a friend or a family member, or someone close, you will say (NNNN) ううん, but don't write うん because that will mean yes.

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6y ago
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11y ago

iie, onaka ga suite imasen. (いいえ、お仲が空いていません。)

But more commonly you might say:

いいえ、まだ大丈夫 iie, mada daijoubu - No thanks, I'm fine

後も少しね ato mo sukoshi ne - Maybe in a little bit

いいえ、けっこうです iie, kekko desu - Thanks anyway

まだ減ったないよ mada hettanai - I'm not hungry just quite yet

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12y ago

Contextually, I'm not sure to what you're referring. Is this "no mom" as in "[I have] no mom," or in the sense that you are saying "No, mom, [I won't go outside.]" In the former, you may say 'haha mou inai.' In the latter, you may say 'iya, okaa[san/chan].'

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14y ago

iie is "no" in Japanese ie means house in Japanese , so please dont mix the two words up

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13y ago

いいえ /ii e/ would be 'no' and 'oh no!' could be しまった /shi ma-tta/ [oh no! damn! etc] or なんてこった /nan te ko-tta/ [what a ! Oh no!].

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13y ago

anata no kot suki hito inai desu

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