Dialect, like Kansai-ben!
Yes. You have to be Japanese and speak Japanese to become Geisha. Geisha/Geiko also speak their own dialect of Japanese known as Kyo-ben.
The people of the Kantō region still speak Japanese. There are quite a few different dialects spoken within the Kantō region including that of Tokyo (which standard Japanese is based off), the dialect of Tochigi and also the Tohoku dialect.
"Baka" is Tokyo dialect and is used to say 'idiot, stupid, moron'. "Aho" is Kansai dialect and is used not as harshly. It can mean 'fool'. == ==
The language that the geisha speak is called "kyo-ben" (it's the Kyoto dialect of Japanese).
its called hyojungo and you can learn it at any school but its better if the teacher is from Tokyo because there dialect is closest
"Honmani" in Japanese means "really" or "truly." It is often used to emphasize the sincerity or truthfulness of a statement.
The main language spoken in Okinawa is Okinawan, which is a dialect of the Ryukyuan language. However, Japanese is also widely spoken and used for official purposes.
Accents are relative things. To have a "Japanese" accent you have to be speaking a language other then Japanese. Japanese speaking characters can have an American accent or a Korean accent, or a dialect within Japanese like an Osakan accent or a Tokyo accent (assuming the intended audience isn't in Osaka or Tokyo). Generally Japanese shows do cast Japanese voice actors, however.
lonely: sabishiilonely place: hitozatohanaretalonely people: kankaLonely=Kodoku"Sabishii" or "Samishii"Both are acceptable, depending on dialect.
It basically translates to, "Everything will turn out fine" or, "Everything will be alright in the end". It's a phrase developed in Okinawan dialect.
Okinawans proudly call themselves uchinanchu (沖縄人) or "sea people" in the local dialect