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No. You can say "for the sake of myself" or "for my sake." "For my sake" sounds much better.
'Sake no okawari onegaishimasu'.
To object something means to either reject or oppose something. To object is a verb that means to disagree or oppose against someone or something.
Friaken;useing the word ficking in a sentence would mean something like... lets say your where frustrated about something? or just wanted to get something over with, you would say something like ''Get that FREAKING thing away from me!'' or for children's sake you would say something like, ''Get that darn thing away from me.''
The reasoning is this: what is being talked about is something (it's sake) that belongs to your conscience. It is therefore that which belongs to your conscience - possessive - and it becomes conscience's sake.
to oppose using evidence or an argument
鮭 - sake (same pronunciation as the drink, and in both words the 'e' has a soft vowel sound as in the word 'ten'.
of Contradict
For the sake money there is a point in loving me.
appearance's sakeIt's intended to mean something done for the purpose of appearance; another way of saying it is "the sake of appearance." So it becomes possessive, just like "For God's sake" or "For Pete's sake."The apostrophe is correct but the final s is optional. "Appearance' sake" is favoured by some authorities as the beginning 's' in 'sake' does for both words. I think it looks odd though.
You don't say anything, just laugh for christ sake. Then maybe go buy a Who shirt and listen to all their albums since they kick.
Watashi WA sake o nomu koto ga arimasu?私は酒を飲むことがあります?Correction:The sentence above translates: "Do I drink 'sake' "Correct way to say 'May I get a drink' is:'Nanka nomimono wo itadakemasu ka' (lit: May I get something to drink). 'Nomimono' however could also refer to 'beverage' so if you mean 'sake' you can replace the words 'Nanka nomimono' with 'sake'.