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Irashaimase is welcome in Japanese.

Pronounced Ee-rah-shah-ee-mah-say.

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Wiki User

βˆ™ 15y ago
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Von Stroehlein

Lvl 1
βˆ™ 2y ago
Not quite.
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Von Stroehlein

Lvl 1
βˆ™ 2y ago
Irashaimase 【 いらしゃいませ 】is a greeting or welcome in stores, etc. by employees; it’s polite and deferential to the customers.
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Von Stroehlein

Lvl 1
βˆ™ 2y ago
however, Irashai 【いらっしゃい】without β€œmase” 【ませ】on the end, IS a more typical greeting, meaning β€œWelcome”.
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Von Stroehlein

Lvl 1
βˆ™ 2y ago
It apparently can also be used to mean β€œCome” as in β€œcome here”, EX: γ€Œζ—©γγ€γ„γ‚‰γ£γ—γ‚ƒγ„γ€‘γ€γƒ“γƒ«γ€γ€Œγ―γ„γ€γŠγ‹γ‚γ•γ‚“γ€- Phonetic: β€œHyaku irashai, Biru.” β€œHai, okāsan.” - English: "Come home early, Bill." "Yes, Mother."
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Wiki User

βˆ™ 12y ago

"Welcome!" is often expressed with the Japanese word "youkoso," which is written in hiragana: ようこそ

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βˆ™ 15y ago

uerukamu or irasshai

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Wiki User

βˆ™ 14y ago

ようこそ

Youkoso

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βˆ™ 13y ago

こんにちは. Konnichiwa.

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Wiki User

βˆ™ 13y ago

SAY: "Yokoso" (Welcome!/Welcome to here!)

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Q: How do you write welcome in Japanese?
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