You may say 'youkoso,' written in Japanese as: ようこそ
Irrashimase / Youkoso
'Dou itashimashite.'
A common word for "welcome" as in "Welcome to ~" is 'youkoso.' In shops and other locations, you would likely be welcomed by employees with 'irasshai(mase)'
"You must welcome [someone/something]."
the word hello comes from the ancient language of Japanese meaning welcome. i think so
"You're welcome" in Japanese is: どういたしまして dou itashimashite.
Welcome in Japanese would be: youkoso.
Moushikashite usually means something along the lines of "Don't tell me..." or "How can this be?" I'm not certain if there's a more direct translation or not.
Yokoso.
Irashaimase is welcome in Japanese.Pronounced Ee-rah-shah-ee-mah-say.
welcome
"Watashitachi no kyoushitsu e youkoso" Watashitachi - Our Kyoushitsu - Classroom e - To Youkoso - Welcome
"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