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I want to know all the ways to say shut up in Japanese and in what situations you would use each one...thanks.

2007-06-26 09:35:36 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

16 answers

黙れ(damare) = plain imperative, but somehow curt and provocative
黙りなさい(damarinasai) = sounds like the order from above
黙ってください(damatte kudasai) = polite, "shut up, please"

静かに(shizukani) = "be quiet"
静かにしてください(shizukani shite kudasai) = "be quiet, please"

2007-06-26 13:09:06 · answer #1 · answered by soph 7 · 6 0

Shut Up In Japanese

2016-09-30 10:15:49 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
How do you say "shut up" in Japanese?
I want to know all the ways to say shut up in Japanese and in what situations you would use each one...thanks.

2016-02-03 00:56:10 · answer #3 · answered by Courtney 4 · 0 0

Speaking Japanese & Loving Japanese Culture!

2016-07-24 05:45:00 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
How do you say "shut up" in Japanese?
I want to know all the ways to say shut up in Japanese and in what situations you would use each one...thanks.

2015-08-07 05:34:05 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you really want to say it with force you could say

damarre

The rolling tongue double r has a pretty powerful effect in Japanese

or another rude way I hear it a lot is

damatchoke

I think it might be Western-Japanese dialect

A nice way to say it would be

shizuka ni shite kudasai

2007-06-26 14:55:03 · answer #6 · answered by chonanbakuchozokuAKS 3 · 2 0

Osithe Biyo- when you are annoyed
Watashi wa okinou desu - when you are just saying it for the heck of saying it
urusai- When you are saying normally(no emotion)
hope this helps....

2007-06-26 09:46:04 · answer #7 · answered by Mage 2 · 2 0

Shizukani.... not necessarily shut up... but be quiet or quiet down... my japanese teacher told us that when we were too loud while he was talking...

2007-06-29 16:49:44 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

--->> Tips---> https://trimurl.im/e45/how-do-you-say-quot-shut-up-quot-in-japanese

2015-08-04 09:06:54 · answer #9 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

"Damare" is probably the harshest way of saying it, and literally means "Be silent!"

"Urusai yo" is ok too, and literally means "You're being annoying"

2007-06-26 10:35:48 · answer #10 · answered by Michael D 2 · 2 0

1. When you ara annoyed or disturbed by what somebody else is saying or when a person is talking too much, you can say "うるさい"/"urusai" or "うるさいよ"/"urusai yo", which literally means "you are being noisy!"

2. When you are in the middle of a class and somebody in the back starts talking and you want them to stop, because you can't hear the teacher because of them talking you can say "なかましい"/ "nakamashii", which something close to the first one, but its very polite and mostly teachers use when they want a student who is being noisy to be quiet during a class.

3. There is also "静かにしてください"/"shizuka ni shite kudasai", which means "please be quiet", but its very polite. If you don't want to sound polite, but instead you want to sound mad, then you can say "静かにしろ"/"shizuka ni shiro!", which means "be quiet!"

4. When you want to listen to something and somebody's talking is not letting you, you can say "静かに"/"shuzuka ni"(do not say thise to strangers, because its very unpolite. Only when a friend or a relative is the one being noisy. If the case is a stranger, then you can use the one in number 3).

those are all i can think about. I hope my answer helps you a lot.

good luck.

2007-06-26 15:42:33 · answer #11 · answered by john 6 · 15 1

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