Anyone here speaks japanese?

Anyone here speaks japanese?

Which is the correct way to say "anyone here speaks japanese?" and "anyone here from japan?"

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algun habla japones? de donde es tu en Japon?

ping pong nip nong

>no need to translate "here" since you are talking to them directly
what do you mean by "anyone from japan", you mean japanese or anyone from japan?

どなたか日本語喋れる人いらっしゃいますか?

どなたか日本人の方いらっしゃいますか?

how would you say both from japan and japanese?

日本出身 -> from Japan
日本人 -> Japanese person

>came from japan
どなたか日本から来た人いますか?

>born in japan
どなたか日本生まれの方いますか?
どなたか日本出身の方いますか?

>japanese
どなたか日本人の方いますか?

nice. now how do you say 'i will hammer your vag so fucking hard you wont be able to walk for a week baby ;)'? asking for sexing reasons

Issyuukan netakiri no naruhodo hageshiku omae no ketsumanko wo okashite okashite mesuiki saseteyaruyo!

>not sure what 'hammer' means in this case
テメェのおま○こ(vag)ぶっ叩いて一週間マトモに歩けないようにしてやるぜ、ベイビー

>ketsumanko
VERY obscene post

mesuiki aussi ;)

when were question marks introduced to japanese? how were questions written before question marks?

qu'est-ce que ça signifie ?

>?
>actually you don't need to use it in japanese

it's been used since around 1890 in Meiji era

L'extase parmi le cul comme une salopé

Boku no ochinchin wa chisai?

epic...
ça donne quoi en kanji ?

牝(female)逝き(ejaculation)

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je vois... le japonais est une langue si avancée...

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exactement

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im not sure if these are exactly what I needed

I need exactly this:
"anyone here speaks japanese"?

"is anyone here from japan?"

"anyone here is japanese"?

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Based japbros.

ここに日本語話せる人がいますか?
ここに日本から来た人がいますか?
ここに日本人がいますか?

大きなちんちんが大好き~

Can someone with a japanese flag confirm this is legit? (no racist)

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there are only 2 google entries for:

>"ここに日本人がいますか?"

strange when it should be such a common sentence? wtf. are you sure that's correct?

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It's literally the easiest way to ask "are there Japanese people here?". It's correct, don't worry.

It's a very basic way of saying it, natives speakers would either use more formal language or simple slang.

In all three examples you can remove the ここに at that start. It means ''in here'', but that can be understood from context.

whats the difference from these?

I guess it's a bit more natural/native