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yuiyoshida

(41,852 posts)
Mon Feb 12, 2018, 09:23 PM Feb 2018

What does Irasshaimase (いらっしゃいませ) actually mean?

In short, it means "Welcome", or "Come in".

If you have ever been to Japan, you will have heard it. Not just once, but many times. Many many times. It can range from short and shrill to low and gruff. It can be said by one female employee at a posh Department store, or a group of male chefs at a rough and ready Ramen restaurant. You can hear said with complete apathy at Konbini stores at 2am (meaning I would rather be doing anything than welcoming you into this store at this time and in this way), or you can hear it said with such enthusiasm, volume and joie de vivre, that you could well be mistaken that you have mistakenly entered your very own Japanese surprise birthday party (in my view some stores almost need a cardiological caution out the front ).

But don't get me wrong, I personally love hearing Irasshaimase. I love the welcome and I love the word, even more so when the last syllable is extended to such extraordinary lengths that it sounds like the beginning of a Disney movie or a Broadway musical.

But what does the word actually mean and where does it come from?

The verb iru/imasu means to be or to exist. And as you may or may not know, there is anywhere between 5 and 10 different levels of politeness in the Japanese language depending on the prefix, the suffix, the conjugation of the verb and even the verb choice. Therefore, a similar word to iru/imasu that has a higher politeness level is irasshairu/irrasshaimasu, which means to be or to exist, but also to come or to go.

But linguistically or grammatically, where does the final 'e' ending coming from in 'irasshaimase', and why is it used when entering a shop. I have heard and read many different theories, and I am sure no matter which answer I give, someone will be able to correct me, but here are the reasons I have seen:

http://www.turningjapanese.org/2014/07/what-does-irasshaimase-actually-mean.html

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What does Irasshaimase (いらっしゃいませ) actually mean? (Original Post) yuiyoshida Feb 2018 OP
Thank you for this interesting... 3catwoman3 Feb 2018 #1
I love when it is said loudly with gusto at a great izakaya! Lucky Luciano Feb 2018 #2

3catwoman3

(24,032 posts)
1. Thank you for this interesting...
Mon Feb 12, 2018, 10:08 PM
Feb 2018

...link, yuiyoshida.

40 years ago last month, I arrived in Japan for a 2 year tour of duty at Yokota Air Base. I totally loved my time there, and immersed myself in as much of the culture as I could.

- Traveled everywhere by train.
- Made it to station 8 on Mt. Fuji before being driven back by thunder and lightning. I still have my Fuji stick.
- Went to the palace on the Emperor's birthday.
- Rowed down a river in the middle of cherry blossom season.
- Bought lots of woodblock prints.
- Went to a public bath a few times.
- Went to the ice and snow festival in Sapporo. Slept on a futon - best bed ever!
- Learned to use the trough-in-the-floor toilets - an interesting challenge whether wearing skirts or pants. I was always afraid something would fall in. Thank goodness for handrails.

I met my now-husband there. We were next door neighbors in the BOQ (bachelor officers' quarters) on base. We've been married 36 years.

When I got back to the US, it took me weeks, if not months, to stop bowing to people when concluding a transaction at a store.

To this day, if we go to a Japanese restaurant, the "Irasshaimase" welcome and the earthy aroma of a bow of miso soup have an instant soothing effect on me.

I would love to go back some day.

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