I'm very sorry!
Mean
The haudensaunee mean irguios
MEAN ignoble - being mean signify - mean
R mean reastate the question. A mean answer it. F mean for example. F mean for example. T mean this show that. RAFFT that what it mean in Ela
I'm very sorry!
shitsure shimasen (lit. i am being rude) is excuse me, used for example if you enter a room or disturb someone. gomenasai is a word for sorry, also sumimasen.
I'm sorry, did you mean "Anata wa koi wo shita koto [ga] arimasen"? あなたは恋をしたこと[が]ありません which means: You have never fallen in love. anata=you koi wo shita=fell/fallen in love arimasen=have not been/is not there/does not exist
its got nothing to do with me
nihongono shukudai ga arimasen
"Anata ga kore suru no jikan ga arimasen."
i don't like (it) the verb aru (arimasen is the negative present conjugation) is used for in-animates not people or animals (some exceptions in the animal case but it's a cultural thing)
''Heya ni WA gomibako ga arimasen'.
As far as i know, 'de arimasu' does not have any real meaning. Like Kenshin saying 'oro'. ~Mega³
From most polite to most casual:もうしわけありません - moushiwake arimasenしつれいしました - shitsurei shimashitaすみません - sumimasenごめんなさい - gomen nasaiごめんね - gomen neごめん - gomenIt means Gomen ("ごめん")
The sentence is wrong both grammar-wise and meaning-wise. We have three different things here, 'ja nai' , 'de WA arimasen' and 'desu'. "Ja nai" is casual speaking for 'am/is/are not', its polite and formal counterpart is 'de WA arimasen', again meaning the same; So one of them is enough and which to use indicates the level of formality in the sentence. 'Desu' is polite for 'am/is/are' and is not needed here. The sentence in correct form would be:[ Watashi no nihongo (WA) sugoi ja nai ]or[ Watashi no nihongo WA sugoi de WA arimasen ]Meaning: My Japanese is not impressive/great.
It does depend on the context but you can say "hitsuyou ha nai" or "hitsuyou ha arimasen"