yes
Doumo - Thanks. Arigatou - Thank you. Doumo arigatou - Thanks a lot. Doumo arigatou gozaimasu - I'm very grateful.
Arigatō or arigatou means "thank you". If you were to say "arigatou gozaimasu", it would be the same as thank you very much. ありがとう ございます (arigatou gozaimasu). You could also say "domo" which would be the equivalent of "thanks". It's impolite, so it would only be used around friends or maybe someone younger than you. It is spelled arigatou (ありがとう). Other ways to say thanks, thank you, etc. arigatou (ありがとう) [most common] doumo (どうも) [most common] doumo arigatou (どうもありがとう) arigatou gozaimasu (ありがとうございます) doumo gozaimasu (どうもございます) doumo arigatou gozaimasu (どうもありがとうございます) [most polite/gracious]
AnswerDomo Arigatou Gozaimasu. Or just Arigatou Gozaimasu.Or Arigato gozai-mas.Or Arigato gozai-mashitaAnything beyound plain old "Arigatou" starts getting pretty flowery, and social structure becomes a part in it. For instance, it would be bad manners for a manager to say "arigato gozai-mashita" to one of his staff under normal circumstances."Domo" is "Thanks" and works well between equals.Domo Arigato (doe-moe ar-ee-got-oe)I've never heard anybody say "Domo arigato" to say thank you. Well, except in that song. To avoid confusion, I usually say "Arigato gozaimasu" when saying thank you in Japanese. Or just "arigato," but that is like saying 'thanks,' where as 'arigato gozaimasu' is 'thank you very much.'AnswerActually im pretty sure its domo arigatou
Teacher = sensei Arigatou = thank you Arigatou gozaimasu = thank you very much. Ergo, "Arigatou (gozaimasu), sensei." Pronunciation: ah-rih-ga-toe goh-zai-maws sen-say
"どうもありがとうございます." Doumo arigatou gozaimasu.
Doumo - Thanks. Arigatou - Thank you. Doumo arigatou - Thanks a lot. Doumo arigatou gozaimasu - I'm very grateful.
Casually: Arigatou / arigatou ne! Politely: Arigatou gozaimasu / doumo arigatou
I'm not exactly sure, but 'otanjoubi' means birthday and 'doumo arigato gozaimasu' means thanks, so it probably means 'thank you for the birthday card'? Not sure...
Thank you - Arigatou in Japanese arigatou -thanks you its so formal neh if goody good boy/girl arigatou gozaimasu if you want it to be shortened sankyuu
"Hontou ni doumo (arigatou gozaimasu)" means "truly thank you very much!"
Arigatou gozaimasu. (ありがとうございます) - Thank you. (Informal situations) Doumo arigatou gozaimasu. (どうもありがとうございます) - Thank you very much. (More formal, polite) Doumo arigatou gozaimashita. (どうもありがとうございました) - The past tense of thank you very much, as in, you are thank the person for doing something. Do not say 'Doumo arigatou' like in the song. That's like saying 'thank you very' in English - it doesn't make sense.
The Tagalog equivalent of "doumo arigatou" is "maraming salamat," which means "thank you very much."
Arigatou gozaimasu = Thank you very much
Arigatō or arigatou means "thank you". If you were to say "arigatou gozaimasu", it would be the same as thank you very much. ありがとう ございます (arigatou gozaimasu). You could also say "domo" which would be the equivalent of "thanks". It's impolite, so it would only be used around friends or maybe someone younger than you. It is spelled arigatou (ありがとう). Other ways to say thanks, thank you, etc. arigatou (ありがとう) [most common] doumo (どうも) [most common] doumo arigatou (どうもありがとう) arigatou gozaimasu (ありがとうございます) doumo gozaimasu (どうもございます) doumo arigatou gozaimasu (どうもありがとうございます) [most polite/gracious]
"Arigatou gozaimasu" is the phrase for "thank you so much" in Japanese.
AnswerDomo Arigatou Gozaimasu. Or just Arigatou Gozaimasu.Or Arigato gozai-mas.Or Arigato gozai-mashitaAnything beyound plain old "Arigatou" starts getting pretty flowery, and social structure becomes a part in it. For instance, it would be bad manners for a manager to say "arigato gozai-mashita" to one of his staff under normal circumstances."Domo" is "Thanks" and works well between equals.Domo Arigato (doe-moe ar-ee-got-oe)I've never heard anybody say "Domo arigato" to say thank you. Well, except in that song. To avoid confusion, I usually say "Arigato gozaimasu" when saying thank you in Japanese. Or just "arigato," but that is like saying 'thanks,' where as 'arigato gozaimasu' is 'thank you very much.'AnswerActually im pretty sure its domo arigatou
Arigatougozaimasu (or) Doumo Arigatou