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I want to ask an older Japanese woman for help in something, but I don’t know her really well, and wondered if there was a tradition of offering an older person something upon meeting them, or speaking to them, and if so, what is the offering? For example, when meeting some Native Americans (especially my people) you can offer them tobacco or if I know them then I offer something I know they want or need. I already know about bowing, but wondered if there were also gifts as tradition and etiquette.

2006-08-15 23:06:02 · 3 answers · asked by Sen 4 in Society & Culture Etiquette

3 answers

Give her a small, quality gift, preferrably of a food or delicacy that is representative of your hometown or the area where you grew up.
She might later give you a gift of lesser value in return.

2006-08-15 23:16:52 · answer #1 · answered by Qoo 2 · 1 0

If you are meeting a person who you don't know really well, it might be a little strange to give her any gifts unless she will be taking care of you by providing a place to stay, etc. If that is the case, any gift related to your culture will bring extra joy in receiving a gift. If receiving her support is not the case, just watch your manner. Be very respectful to her.

2006-08-16 15:46:25 · answer #2 · answered by Eman Kcin 2 · 1 0

In eastern you could communicate of three variety of verbs in keeping with their conjugation. I even have heard many names for them, i will pass with the main obivous ru-dropping (form 2, ichidan), u-dropping (form a million, godan) and the two exceptions suru and kuru. (form 3). Suru and kuru are conjugated entireally diverse from something. Iku is sometiems out between those as its te-style (itte) does not stick to the familiar regulations, although, maximum do no longer as its te style and ta style (that's in actuality comparable to te-style in basic terms that it ends up in a marginally of e; conjugationally that's) are the only ones that fluctuate. this way of verbs you're speaking of is termed in thaught eastern grammar skill style. Suru will become dekiru* Kuru will become korareru Ru-dropping verbs (verbs that lead to iru or eru and style their masu-style via dropping the suited ru and get masu). those will style their skill style the style you describe it. They drop the suited ru and get rareru. each and every so often it rather is shortened to reru. U-dropping verbs (verbs that lead to u (ru, ku, gu, nu, etc) and style their masu-style via changing the suited syllable from its u-counterpart to its i-counterpart (tsu -> chi, su -> shi, ku -> ki, gu -> gi, etc). those style their skill style via shifting their final syllable to their e-counterpart (tsu -> te, shi -> se, gu -> ge, nu -> ne, etc) and upload ru. Ikeru, Hanaseru, Yoberu, Ieru are the rather some examples. in case you learn the regulations above, you will see that for the main section you do no longer could learn them via heart. If some thing does not lead to iru or eru (so it the two ends up in aru, oru, uru or u), you recognize it rather is an u-dropping verb. although, if a verb ends up in eru or iru, you could no longer tell whether it rather is a ru-dropping or an u-dropping, in spite of the undeniable fact that, they are frequently ru-dropping ones. some common exception is: kaeru and hashiru. so which you may learn via heart for verbs that lead to iru and eru in basic terms. *keep in mind that there are verbs that have been created from the contraction of noun wo suru (like benkyousuru). those will of direction conjugate like "suru" (nicely, or to be greater precise: the conjugated section is suru itself so it rather is not staggering) additionally keep in mind that particular verb types would have diverse meanings in diverse conjugation varieties. case in point kiru (ru-drop) skill to positioned on at the same time as kiru (u-drop) skill to diminish, to diminish somebody down.

2016-09-29 08:03:09 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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