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you don`t make whoever says it speak English like a normal human
'Dou'
It's Play-Doh
No - it does not mean Jackie in english. "Hedwig" is the English language equivalent for "Jadwiga"
You have spelled it correctly in your question ... Stud.
'Dou itashimashite.'
It is Japanese. Means: Not at all OR You're welcome
Ariga'to mashti'. Arigatou Gozaimashita. Visit www.japanese999.com -- "Dou itashimashite" = "You're welcome" (when answering thank you)
Dou Itashimashite (don't mention it) is pronounced as follows: Dough Eetasheemash'te (using English pronounciation). Note the little ', where you would not really pronounce the last "i".
Dou itashimashite is a standard phrase taught in most textbooks. Realistically, there's any number of ways, ranging from "kochira koso" (I should be thanking you) to "Iie, iie," (No, no [As in, 'no, it's no problem']) to "Hai, doumo."
In response to "thank you", 'you're welcome' is 'dou itashimashite' in Japanese. Hiragana - どういたしまして
In answer to someone's appreciation: 'O rei ni WA oyobimasen' => [lit: No thanks necessary]'Dou itashimashite' => [lit: You're (very/most) welcome]In welcoming someone's arrival:'Irasshai mase' => [lit: Welcome!]'Youkoso' => [lit: Welcome!] used less formally.'Yoku kite kure mashita' => [lit: Good of you to come/Welcome!] Usually used with someone you know.
Hope this helps,どういたしまして in hiraganaDou ita shima shite, in romaji (letters).This is the most formal but common version.
You're welcome!romaji:"dō itashimashite"hiragana:どういたしましてkanji:どう致しましてThe most common translation is 'dou itashimashite,' though variations include 'kochira koso' ("No, I should thank you") and 'ie, ie,' ("No, no, [no problem]")
"You're welcome" in Japanese is: どういたしまして dou itashimashite.
"Okaeri" means "Welcome home""Irasshai" means "Welcome" (as in welcome to my home/store)"Dou itashimashite" means "You're welcome" (as in answering thank you)ようこそ "Yōkoso" means "Welcome" (as in greeting)if you want a more formal approach, extend it to irasshaimase
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