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 can say le-le or liyo.https://www.livinglanguage.com/community/discussion/315/saying-youre-welcome-in-japanese-not-recommended
'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)'
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.
Irashaimase is welcome in Japanese.Pronounced Ee-rah-shah-ee-mah-say.
You can say le-le or liyo.https://www.livinglanguage.com/community/discussion/315/saying-youre-welcome-in-japanese-not-recommended
당신은 환영합니다 = You are welcome
'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]."
You may say 'youkoso,' written in Japanese as: ようこそ
The phrase "You're welcome" in Waray is "Waray anay / Waray sapayan".
the word hello comes from the ancient language of Japanese meaning welcome. i think so
ASQUAWCHESTRA. Youre welcome.
THEY WERE 1,000,000 YEARS OLD youre welcome
Inactive, motionless, stationary, unmoving, immobile, stopped, still, dormant.
"You're welcome" in Japanese is: どういたしまして dou itashimashite.