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Ohayo (おはよう, ohayō) is a colloquial term meaning good morning in Japanese. Ohayo may also refer to: Good Morning, 1959 Japanese comedy film by director Yasujirō Ozu; Ohayo Mountain, Catskill Mountains, New York, US; A misspelling of Ohio, a U.S. state
Equivalent to ohayo gozaimasu (おはようございます good morning). The asai (あさい) is a corruption of asameshi (朝飯 breakfast). The expression literally translates to asa-gohan wo o-tabe ni narimashita ka? (朝ごはんをお食べになりましたか? have you eaten breakfast?).
It is a rough contraction of ohayō gozaimasu (おはようございます). [3] In addition to use as a greeting, oss! can also function as "yessir!" when a subordinate is brusquely questioned by a teacher, superior officer, or sempai. It has also spread overseas as OSU or OSS, mainly in the Brazilian Jiu- Jitsu and Karate communities. [4]
For polite speech, -masu, desu and gozaimasu are used in Kansai as well as in Tokyo, but traditional Kansai dialect has its own polite forms. Desu is replaced by dasu in Osaka and dosu in Kyoto. There is another unique polite form omasu and it is often replaced by osu in Kyoto.
Megane tells the story of Taeko, an antisocial city woman, vacationing on a quaint Japanese island (later identified by the director as Yoron Island,Kagoshima).Upon arriving at the Hamada Inn, she meets some inhabitants of the island: Sakura, a mysterious older woman who runs a shaved ice stand on the island during the spring season, but accepts no money; Haruna, a biology teacher who sighs ...
In this case, that will mean investigating what happened. "That’s what we owe, certainly, to the families, and that’s what we owe to the American people,” he said.
Soap is a valuable tool, he said, mainly to help break up sticky, oily substances. “But usually, it’s more the mechanical force that’s doing most of the washing,” he said.
Ohayō! Spank (おはよう!スパンク, Ohayō! Supanku, lit. Good morning! Spank) is a Japanese shōjo manga written by Shun'ichi Yukimuro and drawn by Shizue Takanashi.The series has been adapted as an anime television series, broadcast in Japan from 1981 to 1982 for 66 episodes, and a theatrical movie released in 1982.