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  1. 2017年10月16日 · 让我们回到日本的 和 ,意味着和谐。. 给人带来不便和麻烦便是打破这种和谐。. 而道歉则是对这种和谐被打破的一种弥补。. 对面对麻烦的人来说,表达出你意识到了他们的感受,这就是日本道歉的主要意义。. 一直表达歉意,直到对方让你停止道歉。. 让双方 ...

  2. 2017年10月16日 · Apologies: Gomen-nasai & Sumimasen. Here we have the two classic apologies in Japanese: gomen-nasai ("I'm sorry") and sumimasen ("Excuse me"). As you might gather from the context in the video above, gomen-nasai tends to be more casual, and is used among friends, whereas the more formal sumimasen is more appropriate for use with strangers and ...

  3. 2017年10月16日 · 道歉是日本社会交流中一项重要的组成部分。你不仅要知道使用哪些道歉用语,还需要知道什么时候和如何使用它们。 在日本,迟到可是很严重的。如果你的工作9点开始,你的老板和同事则希望你8点55已经坐在办公室了。尤其是如果你是新员工,你需要来的更早。

  4. 2017年10月16日 · The key to apology in Japan is understanding that it's not about admitting guilt or culpability. In fact, nobody even really cares who's wrong. Rather, Japanese society is built around group harmony, and a vital point of working well with a group is developing an awareness of when someone in the group has been inconvenienced, whether it was by ...

  5. 2016年10月31日 · Kagura: A Dance Fit for the Gods. The two Chinese characters that form the word kagura —the character for “god” and the one for “enjoyment”—hint at its origins. Kagura is first described in the Kojiki (Records of Ancient Matters) and the Nihon Shoki (The Chronicles of Japan), historical records of Japanese mythology compiled in the ...

  6. 2017年11月17日 · Nevertheless, it’s considered to be one of the most difficult languages in the world to learn for English native speakers, and even Japanese people tend to agree. For example, when an American friend of Japanese Twitter user @chomado came to visit Japan, he complained that it was difficult to distinguish between the Japanese “yes” and “no.”

  7. 2017年12月21日 · pixta.jp. The Hakone Sekisho (箱根関所), or Hakone Checkpoint, was the first major checkpoint on the Tokaido (東海道) highway connecting Edo (now Tokyo) with Kyoto. Constructed in 1619 and used until 1869, it was one of 53 such checkpoints used by the Tokugawa government to control travel between cities during the Edo Period (1603-1868).