Japanese (Japan) Arigato; Domo arigato
Japanese (Japan) [act of thanks not ended] Arigato gozaimasu
Japanese (Japan) [act of thanks has ended] Arigato gozaimashita
Mandarin Chinese (China) Xie xie
Edit: Eduardo's 'Doh je' is also Chinese, but Cantonese.
2007-05-28 07:22:57
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answer #1
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answered by JJ 7
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in japanese= arigato
in chinese= Do jie
2007-05-28 14:21:09
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answer #2
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answered by edu3genau 4
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In Japanese, variations of "doumo arigatou gozaimasu//ã©ãããããã¨ããããã¾ã" are used to say thank you in different levels of politeness.
In Chinese, there are multiple ways to say "thank you." In mainland China, most people use "xie xie//è¬è¬." I speak Cantonese, so the two ways I learned it are "mm goi//å該" and "do jie." Mm goi is used when people do favors for you (actions), and do jie is when you receive things like gifts.
2007-05-28 22:51:19
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answer #3
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answered by tigerlilyx 3
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I don't know how to spell it in Chinese, but it sounds like just like "shi* shi*" except with the "t" left off.
Don't know Japanese.
2007-05-28 18:05:25
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answer #4
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answered by cg17 4
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japanese is or-i-ga-to and in chinese Do jie
2007-05-28 14:18:10
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answer #5
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answered by hiroshiro 1
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in japanese "doumo arigatou gozaimasu"(ã©ããæé£ããããã¾ã)
in chinese "she she"(è¬è¬)
v(^^)v peace!
2007-05-28 15:58:28
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answer #6
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answered by andrew 5
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japanese - arigatÅ gozaimasu
chinese(mandarin) - xiè xiè (Xie4xie5)
2007-05-29 01:39:44
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answer #7
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answered by スミレ 4
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in japanese its arigato
2007-05-28 14:21:34
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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