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Re:desire to practice English, please help me practice English
Hello,
My name is Steve and I live in the United States in the State of Indiana. I'm a retired Police Officer and spent 12 years in the United States Army, one of those years was in your country. I would like to help you and maybe you could help me. I'm looking for a person I became friends with while there. She lived in a village called Bong Song and ran a Coke/Beer Stand near the front gate of LZ Two Bits South. I'm for real and I hope your are also
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Language pair: English; Vietnamese
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Steve N.
May 8, 2013
# Msgs: 2
Latest: May 8, 2013
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Hi! Maybe I can help you to learn spanish =)
Hi! I am Susana, im 22 years old and Im chilean. I speak spanish (native language) and a little bit of english. I hope receive your answers for can learn more about english or other language. Greetings.
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Language pair: Spanish; English
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Susana G.
May 5, 2013
# Msgs: 7
Latest: June 26, 2013
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Esther O.
May 5, 2013
# Msgs: 6
Latest: May 5, 2013
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Esther O.
May 5, 2013
# Msgs: 1
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tamia j.
May 5, 2013
# Msgs: 7
Latest: June 26, 2013
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spanish speaking friends
hi I need help in speaking Spanish. I'm a beginner. I can help with your English :)
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Language pair: English; Spanish
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mysti
May 1, 2013
# Msgs: 1
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Re:Re:what is the difference?
okay, thank you, that actually helps a lot. there were places saying that they both meant "nice to meet you", but in a lot of translated work that i'd come across "hajimemashite" was normally translated as "how do you do?", which never made a lot of sense to me, as there was never a reply of "i'm doing pretty good". so, from now on i'm going to think of "yoroshiku onegaishimasu" as more like, "I hope we can get along well".
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Language pair: English; Japanese
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Madison A.
April 28, 2013
# Msgs: 3
Latest: April 28, 2013
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Re:what is the difference?
Konnichiwa!
"Hajimemashite" roughly translates to "Nice to meet you!"
"Yoroshiku onegaishimasu" roughly trandlates to "Please look kindly/favorably upon me."
keep in mind the reason you are getting varied answers is because a lot of Japanese cannot be directly translated into English and vice versa. Since I'm assuming your native language is English, there should not be a problem when using those phrases with a Japanese person. They will most definitely understand what you are saying. Good luck and keep learning as much as you can!
Luke
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Language pair: English; Japanese
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Luke
April 26, 2013
# Msgs: 3
Latest: April 28, 2013
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what is the difference?
hi, I have just started learning Japanese. if you will, could you maybe tell me the difference between "hajimemashite" , and "yoroshiku onegaishimasu" . I've been getting varying answers.
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Language pair: English; Japanese
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Madison A.
April 24, 2013
# Msgs: 3
Latest: April 28, 2013
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Deutsch vs Arabisch
Ich möchte mit einem Deutschen Deutsch sprechen.Ich kann ihm Arabisch beibringen.
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Language pair: Arabic, Middle Eastern; English
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ahmed k.
April 23, 2013
# Msgs: 1
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