MEANS: "Now I'm at home, and you? (are where? / what about you?)..."
ima - now
WA - is (I am)
ie - home / house
ni - inside (ni is used for other meanings but IE NI is IN HOME)
imasu - I am / am (formal)
... anata WA - You Are(?)
(Casual Japanese - and how about you can be just "...and you?")
Cheers,
E-2-J-BLOG
Ima = nowWA = (topic marker)ie = houseni = (place marker)imasu = exists at (for living beings only; not for inanimate objects)anata = youIma WA ie ni imasu = "I am currentlyat home."Anata WA? = "How about you? (Are you at home?)"
'(Those/The) Women are at home/their houses.'
SUNDE means "to live" such as I live in this house. Watashi WA ie ni sunde imasu.
'(My) family is at home.'[Note: since pronouns are commonly omitted in Japanese, this also could refer to someone else's family being at home, like 'her' or 'their' etc; but most commonly the omission occurs for the 'speaker' talking about himself/herself.]
IE= Internet Explorer
sulu an ie
For example.
Ridiculous; implausible
INR
If you mean 'Le bien' it means 'The good'.
Ie in Latin means 'id est' which in English means 'that is' or 'in other words'
Ie stands for, In english, For Example. Eg is a latin meaning, exempli gratia, which does NOT mean the same as Ie."ie" is more properly stated "i. e." and is an abbreviation for "id est", which is Latin for "that is." "e.g." means "for example." "i.e." and "e.g." do not mean the same thing.