'Boku wa koishiteru' is written as 僕ã¯æ‹ã—ã¦ã‚‹ in Japanese. As you can see, the words 'boku' and 'koi' both use kanji.
Otome wa Boku ni Koishiteru happened in 2005.
The duration of Otome wa Boku ni Koishiteru is 1440.0 seconds.
Otome wa Boku ni Koishiteru was created on 2005-01-28.
It's not even out yet.
Yuki Kodaira has: Played Boy in "Air" in 2005. Played Otoko no Ko in "Air" in 2005. Played Maid 2 in "Eikoku koi monogatari Emma" in 2005. Played Konai Hoso in "Otome wa boku ni koishiteru" in 2006. Played Rikujobu Komon in "Otome wa boku ni koishiteru" in 2006. Played Joshi Seito in "Otome wa boku ni koishiteru" in 2006. Played Taiiku Kyoshi in "Otome wa boku ni koishiteru" in 2006. Played Seito in "D.C. II: Da Capo II" in 2007. Played Kodomo in "D.C. II: Da Capo II" in 2007. Played Tetsu in "Hagane no renkinjutsushi" in 2009. Played Eito Unabara in "Metarufaitobeiburedo Zero-G" in 2012.
Ranma 1/2 , Otome WA Boku ni Koishiteru , Love Hina , Get Backers and Great Teacher Onizuki .
In colloquial Japanese 'boku' means 'I', so this sentence it would mean, "I don't like you". However for 'boku' to be combined with 'suki ja nai' i.e. I don't like, is odd. It would read, 'Watashi' another personal pronoun for 'I' in Japanese.
Yui Sakakibara has: Played Hisako Kajiura in "Otome wa boku ni koishiteru" in 2006. Played Nono Nekomiya in "Yotsunoha Dai 1 wa" in 2008. Played Ayase Kishimoto in "Kaosu heddo" in 2008. Played Hamaji Yakumo in "H2O: Footprints in the Sand" in 2008. Played Nono Nekomiya in "Yotsunoha Dai 2 wa" in 2008. Played Hisako Kajiura in "Otome wa Boku ni Koishiteru: Futari no Elder" in 2012.
"Boku no WA namae Justin-kun desu" means "My name is Justin" and "Boku WA totemo ureshii watachtachi au desu" means "I am very happy we met."
watashi / boku WA sukottolandojin desu watashi if youre female boku or ore if your male
Watashi/boku/ore WA ichigo ga suki or something like that. By the way, 'watashi WA' is used for girls most of the time, but not necessary. 'Boku WA' and 'ore WA' is used for boys/guys.
"Boku wa oni desu" means "I am a demon" in Japanese. "Boku" is a casual way to say "I" or "me," while "oni" translates to "demon" or "ogre." The verb "desu" is used for emphasis, similar to saying "am" in English.