"Thanks, yours is *fine*"
Every. Language. Ever. Kinda like it though makes me happy after you work hard to learn one :)
To be honest this happens to me in germany too. „Wow your german is really good!“ „Thank you! I sure hope it is given i was born here :)“
Im dutch and english is my second language but i talk more english tbh, and whenever my friends hear me talk dutch theyr like “wow your so good, when did you learn that??” 😭🙏
I would be like "Cone-itchy-wah"
I love her voice in this short
The way you just cut of the "good" is absolutely perfect. It really symbols your disappointment🤣💀
"Thanks, yours is alright".
As a half german half japanese i always get the same comments depends which country i am (im fluent in both)
I sooo can relate 😆 Whenever I come back to Korea with my Korean passport and European face and try to go to my fast line for citizens they always angrily approach and try to direct me to the line for foreigners 😅 I understand they probably have some confused foreigners going to the wrong line pretty often, but my insecure self feels so rejected at the time 😅
Ive been told that my english is rlly good whilst theyre holding my new zealand passport.
It's always for just konichiwa😂
I think they just want to make you happy and feel free to speak Japanese maybe...... (if you are not japanese).. thanks for reading 😊❤
I love how English has been incorporated into Japanese in such interesting ways. "Nextu Prease".
Depends where you visit. In asia, if youre not asian everyone is shocked, but in many places they only say your speaking is good because they can tell youre not native from your accent. Most places don’t have a single dominant look for native speakers and outsiders.
i just have to say hi in japanese for them to think i know the whole entire language.
I got this sometimes when I was living in Japan studying Japanese and would go out to try out the new things I learned. The other times I got confused faces 😆 I order a cheese burger from McDonald and ended up having to point 😆
I was born and have lived my entire life in Germany. This happened to me just once while I was working in a hotel — it really felt kind of awkward. But going through this on a daily basis just gets annoying at one point, I guess.
日本語上手ですね!
@Ruby-736