What is the difference between desu and de aru in Japanese?
Q. I was reading up on Japanese verbs, and some websites and books try to explain de aru and desu, but it doesn't make sense. Are desu and de aru the same? Is desu a form of de aru, and if so, isn't it irregular? Thanks.
Asked by Invader Z - Tue Apr 10 16:49:40 2007 - - 3 Answers - 1 Comments
A. Basically, 'de aru' is only used in writing. It's slightly more formal than 'da' (in writing), but the two can be used together. Note, however, that you have a continuum of politeness, which is different in speaking and writing. In SPEAKING, from LEAST to MOST formal: da--> desu--> de arimasu In WRITING, from LEAST to MOST formal: desu--> de arimasu--> da/de aru
Answered by paladin - Tue Apr 10 17:11:33 2007
Q. I was reading up on Japanese verbs, and some websites and books try to explain de aru and desu, but it doesn't make sense. Are desu and de aru the same? Is desu a form of de aru, and if so, isn't it irregular? Thanks.
Asked by Invader Z - Tue Apr 10 16:49:40 2007 - - 3 Answers - 1 Comments
A. Basically, 'de aru' is only used in writing. It's slightly more formal than 'da' (in writing), but the two can be used together. Note, however, that you have a continuum of politeness, which is different in speaking and writing. In SPEAKING, from LEAST to MOST formal: da--> desu--> de arimasu In WRITING, from LEAST to MOST formal: desu--> de arimasu--> da/de aru
Answered by paladin - Tue Apr 10 17:11:33 2007
How to know when to use Desu ka and Shiteru in Japanese?
Q. for example.. ai shiteru is I love you but why hamigaki shiteru is do you brush your teeth? and not i brush my teeth. plus in what kind of sentence should desu ka be used and what for shiteru. for the sentence, kaminoke nagai ne? is it an informal form of anata wa kaminoke nagai desu ne?
Asked by Shane Uehara - Mon Apr 7 12:12:10 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. shiteru means doing or habitully do ai shiteru - I love you hamigaki shiteru - do you brush your teeth (every day)? or - are you brushing your teeth (now)? Will you go to the restaurant? - restoran ni ikimasu ka? Do you go to the restaurant these days? - saikin sono resutoran ni ittemasu ka? You are right about this. kaminoke nagai ne? is an informal form of anata wa kaminoke ga nagai desu ne?
Answered by RyoTa - Tue Apr 8 07:30:51 2008
Q. for example.. ai shiteru is I love you but why hamigaki shiteru is do you brush your teeth? and not i brush my teeth. plus in what kind of sentence should desu ka be used and what for shiteru. for the sentence, kaminoke nagai ne? is it an informal form of anata wa kaminoke nagai desu ne?
Asked by Shane Uehara - Mon Apr 7 12:12:10 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. shiteru means doing or habitully do ai shiteru - I love you hamigaki shiteru - do you brush your teeth (every day)? or - are you brushing your teeth (now)? Will you go to the restaurant? - restoran ni ikimasu ka? Do you go to the restaurant these days? - saikin sono resutoran ni ittemasu ka? You are right about this. kaminoke nagai ne? is an informal form of anata wa kaminoke ga nagai desu ne?
Answered by RyoTa - Tue Apr 8 07:30:51 2008
What's the difference between da and desu?
Q. What is the difference between da and desu? I have commonly used desu until I found out da shows sense-of-being e.g "genki da" means "is good". I've also learnt that you can negate this "genki janai". Are these true and what is the difference between desu and da? Thanks.
Asked by Nintendan - Fri Feb 26 18:23:05 2010 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Da and desu mean the same thing. The only difference is that desu is more formal than da and males use da more frequently than females (who will drop it all together). Genki desu = Genki da = genki They all mean the same thing. Yes, janai is one negative form of desu/da. It is the informal form. There is also dewa arimasen and dewa nai. In terms of formality: dewa arimasen > dewa nai > janai "Ja" comes about because it's a contraction of "dewa," like how "can't" is a contraction of "cannot."
Answered by Belie - Fri Feb 26 18:27:38 2010
Q. What is the difference between da and desu? I have commonly used desu until I found out da shows sense-of-being e.g "genki da" means "is good". I've also learnt that you can negate this "genki janai". Are these true and what is the difference between desu and da? Thanks.
Asked by Nintendan - Fri Feb 26 18:23:05 2010 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Da and desu mean the same thing. The only difference is that desu is more formal than da and males use da more frequently than females (who will drop it all together). Genki desu = Genki da = genki They all mean the same thing. Yes, janai is one negative form of desu/da. It is the informal form. There is also dewa arimasen and dewa nai. In terms of formality: dewa arimasen > dewa nai > janai "Ja" comes about because it's a contraction of "dewa," like how "can't" is a contraction of "cannot."
Answered by Belie - Fri Feb 26 18:27:38 2010
I found other ways to answer "genki desu ka?" How do you spell these words, and are the answers correct?
Q. Other answers to "O-Genki desu ka?" zekkouchou desu hai, sugoku genki desu yo hai, bacchiri desu I'm mostly looking for a spell check and confirmation that these are actual answers. Thanks!
Asked by 1two3 - Tue Jul 31 04:10:16 2007 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Genki desu ka (Geng-Kih-Des-Kah) It's just like a people asking another people if he/she is fine. Example: Maaku: Sutoshi-san, ogenki desu ka? (Sutoshi, are you fine?) Sutoshi: Hai genki desu. (Yes, I'm fine.) Take a look at Sutoshi's dialogue. He said Hai genki desu. Recognize that there is no KA. Why? Because if you add KA in a sentence or in a question, that means you are talking about another person. When there is no KA, that means you're talking about yourself. Zekkouchou desu Zekkouchou has a wrong spelling. I tried to check the english translations of this word and no search results found. I heard the word zekkouchou, I think it has some wrong spellings. Hai, sugoku genki desu yo (Sugoku has no english translations) I think it… [cont.]
Answered by hana no ana - Tue Jul 31 05:02:08 2007
Q. Other answers to "O-Genki desu ka?" zekkouchou desu hai, sugoku genki desu yo hai, bacchiri desu I'm mostly looking for a spell check and confirmation that these are actual answers. Thanks!
Asked by 1two3 - Tue Jul 31 04:10:16 2007 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Genki desu ka (Geng-Kih-Des-Kah) It's just like a people asking another people if he/she is fine. Example: Maaku: Sutoshi-san, ogenki desu ka? (Sutoshi, are you fine?) Sutoshi: Hai genki desu. (Yes, I'm fine.) Take a look at Sutoshi's dialogue. He said Hai genki desu. Recognize that there is no KA. Why? Because if you add KA in a sentence or in a question, that means you are talking about another person. When there is no KA, that means you're talking about yourself. Zekkouchou desu Zekkouchou has a wrong spelling. I tried to check the english translations of this word and no search results found. I heard the word zekkouchou, I think it has some wrong spellings. Hai, sugoku genki desu yo (Sugoku has no english translations) I think it… [cont.]
Answered by hana no ana - Tue Jul 31 05:02:08 2007
When is Desu used and when is imasu used?
Q. I am using livemocha to learn Japanese. I am starting to realize things but I don't get why some phrases use desu and some phrases use imasu. For example, "Watashi wa toshi wo totte imasu" means i am old, but "Watashi wa wakai desu" means I am young. Can you help?
Asked by thejackal221 - Sun Jan 24 15:20:45 2010 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. In the sentence "Watashi wa toshi o totteimasu.", you're describing not yourself, but your age. You're saying, basically, "I am getting on in years.". toshi = years totteimasu = present-tense conjugation of the verb "toru", which means, "to take" Literally, you're saying "I am taking years." You use "imasu", because it is part of the verb, but it also pertains to a living person, which makes it "imasu". When you say "Watashi wa wakai desu.", the only verb used is "desu", which means "to be". You are describing you, yourself (watashi). Literally, "I am young." watashi = I desu = verb = to be/is wakai = young
Answered by Emily - - Sun Jan 24 15:44:30 2010
Q. I am using livemocha to learn Japanese. I am starting to realize things but I don't get why some phrases use desu and some phrases use imasu. For example, "Watashi wa toshi wo totte imasu" means i am old, but "Watashi wa wakai desu" means I am young. Can you help?
Asked by thejackal221 - Sun Jan 24 15:20:45 2010 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. In the sentence "Watashi wa toshi o totteimasu.", you're describing not yourself, but your age. You're saying, basically, "I am getting on in years.". toshi = years totteimasu = present-tense conjugation of the verb "toru", which means, "to take" Literally, you're saying "I am taking years." You use "imasu", because it is part of the verb, but it also pertains to a living person, which makes it "imasu". When you say "Watashi wa wakai desu.", the only verb used is "desu", which means "to be". You are describing you, yourself (watashi). Literally, "I am young." watashi = I desu = verb = to be/is wakai = young
Answered by Emily - - Sun Jan 24 15:44:30 2010
What is the difference between desu and aimasu?
Q. What is the difference between the two, it doesn't seem like anything.
Asked by GearWink - Thu May 7 17:24:49 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I'm guessing you mean "arimasu," for "aimasu" means to meet. desu: This is the Japanese copula, used to equate one thing to another. X wa Y desu X is defined as Y. X is almost always a noun, whereas Y can be a noun, adjective, or some other things. Ben-san wa gakusei desu. Ben-san (noun) - subject gakusei (noun) - predicate nominative Ben is a student. Ben-san wa shizuka desu. Ben-san (noun) - subject shizuka (adjective) - predicate adjective Ben is quiet. (Or, Ben is defined as being quiet.) Arimasu: This is not a copula and is an ordinary verb. It literally means "to exist." Tsukue no ue ni hon ga arimasu. There is a book on top of the desk. Arimasu represents "there is" in this sentence. Hon wa tsukue no ue ni arimasu.… [cont.]
Answered by Dalfreeze - Thu May 7 17:42:10 2009
Q. What is the difference between the two, it doesn't seem like anything.
Asked by GearWink - Thu May 7 17:24:49 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I'm guessing you mean "arimasu," for "aimasu" means to meet. desu: This is the Japanese copula, used to equate one thing to another. X wa Y desu X is defined as Y. X is almost always a noun, whereas Y can be a noun, adjective, or some other things. Ben-san wa gakusei desu. Ben-san (noun) - subject gakusei (noun) - predicate nominative Ben is a student. Ben-san wa shizuka desu. Ben-san (noun) - subject shizuka (adjective) - predicate adjective Ben is quiet. (Or, Ben is defined as being quiet.) Arimasu: This is not a copula and is an ordinary verb. It literally means "to exist." Tsukue no ue ni hon ga arimasu. There is a book on top of the desk. Arimasu represents "there is" in this sentence. Hon wa tsukue no ue ni arimasu.… [cont.]
Answered by Dalfreeze - Thu May 7 17:42:10 2009
What's the difference between imasu and desu?
Q. When do you use which, and what is the main difference? Thanks!
Asked by Julia Kyaroraine - Sun Mar 29 13:47:21 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. imasu is to be added to the end of a verb, tabemasu = eat nomimasu = drink desu is translates to = is am and are ureshii desu = i am happy kanashii desu = i am sad. (remember that it is not always necessary to say I, so you can just say the verb mostly,) i hope this has helped if you have anymore questions please email me at rubymanborde@yahoo.co.uk, please feel free to email any time,
Answered by shigure - Sun Mar 29 13:58:02 2009
Q. When do you use which, and what is the main difference? Thanks!
Asked by Julia Kyaroraine - Sun Mar 29 13:47:21 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. imasu is to be added to the end of a verb, tabemasu = eat nomimasu = drink desu is translates to = is am and are ureshii desu = i am happy kanashii desu = i am sad. (remember that it is not always necessary to say I, so you can just say the verb mostly,) i hope this has helped if you have anymore questions please email me at rubymanborde@yahoo.co.uk, please feel free to email any time,
Answered by shigure - Sun Mar 29 13:58:02 2009
What does Sore wa himitsu desu mean?
Q. I read it in a story. A story that actually refused to define the phrase.
Asked by Aviaris - Fri Jul 3 22:23:47 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. It/that is a secret.
Answered by Ronnie - Fri Jul 3 22:32:27 2009
Q. I read it in a story. A story that actually refused to define the phrase.
Asked by Aviaris - Fri Jul 3 22:23:47 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. It/that is a secret.
Answered by Ronnie - Fri Jul 3 22:32:27 2009
What is ichi ban desu ne and ki mo chi desu yo means in english?
Q. today i was talking to my friend, he was from japan he said those word to me and i don't know what he meant. so please translate that for. Really appreciate it.
Asked by moe - Sun Sep 7 10:00:34 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. ichiban means - the best; number one kimochi - its feels great "ichiban desu ne"- its the best right? "kimochi desu yo"- its feels great isnt it? im studying japanese by myself for 2 years, home study.. desu is a word of respect, you can used ne or yo at the end of the sentence, but more feminine if u use "ne".
Answered by hani021183 - Sun Sep 7 10:32:40 2008
Q. today i was talking to my friend, he was from japan he said those word to me and i don't know what he meant. so please translate that for. Really appreciate it.
Asked by moe - Sun Sep 7 10:00:34 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. ichiban means - the best; number one kimochi - its feels great "ichiban desu ne"- its the best right? "kimochi desu yo"- its feels great isnt it? im studying japanese by myself for 2 years, home study.. desu is a word of respect, you can used ne or yo at the end of the sentence, but more feminine if u use "ne".
Answered by hani021183 - Sun Sep 7 10:32:40 2008
What does yuku no desu ka mean in Japanese?
Q. It is a song lyric for the song Crawl by the band Veltpunch.
Asked by p.foster27 - Tue Sep 29 07:21:25 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. ? yuku no desu ka? Do [you] go?
Answered by soph - Tue Sep 29 07:51:57 2009
Q. It is a song lyric for the song Crawl by the band Veltpunch.
Asked by p.foster27 - Tue Sep 29 07:21:25 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. ? yuku no desu ka? Do [you] go?
Answered by soph - Tue Sep 29 07:51:57 2009
what is the English translation of Watashi wa anato no goto suhai wo shitai desu from Japanese?
Q. I can't seem to translate it all together and I'm struggling to makes sense of just the words themselves. Would be grateful for anyone's help...
Asked by meghan gould - Wed Jul 28 01:16:42 2010 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. I can't seem to translate it all together and I'm struggling to makes sense of just the words themselves. Would be grateful for anyone's help...
Asked by meghan gould - Wed Jul 28 01:16:42 2010 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
What is the difference between Arimasu, Imasu, and Desu?
Q. What is the difference between Arimasu, Imasu, and Desu?
Asked by dracomar666 - Thu Nov 27 08:57:10 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. "Arimasu( " means existence of something. ex. nippon niwa fuzisan ga arimasu) There is the mt.fuzi in Japan. "Imasu( " means existence of someone or express condition of thing. ex1. nippon niwa nipponzin ga imasu) There are Japanese in Japan. ex2. nippon niwa nipponzin ga sunde imasu) Japanese are living in Japan. "desu "is an expression of conclude something. "Desu" in English is "be"! ex. nippon wa simaguni desu) Japan is an island.
Answered by Mattiman - Thu Nov 27 11:40:44 2008
Q. What is the difference between Arimasu, Imasu, and Desu?
Asked by dracomar666 - Thu Nov 27 08:57:10 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. "Arimasu( " means existence of something. ex. nippon niwa fuzisan ga arimasu) There is the mt.fuzi in Japan. "Imasu( " means existence of someone or express condition of thing. ex1. nippon niwa nipponzin ga imasu) There are Japanese in Japan. ex2. nippon niwa nipponzin ga sunde imasu) Japanese are living in Japan. "desu "is an expression of conclude something. "Desu" in English is "be"! ex. nippon wa simaguni desu) Japan is an island.
Answered by Mattiman - Thu Nov 27 11:40:44 2008
What does "kono kuni no namae wa itaria desu" mean?
Q. I think it means this country is named italy but I'm not sure.
Asked by Jason S - Thu Jul 29 00:18:47 2010 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. [Kono kuni no namae wa Itaria desu.] Literally means "The name of this country is Italy."
Answered by Anonymous Student - Thu Jul 29 00:20:41 2010
Q. I think it means this country is named italy but I'm not sure.
Asked by Jason S - Thu Jul 29 00:18:47 2010 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. [Kono kuni no namae wa Itaria desu.] Literally means "The name of this country is Italy."
Answered by Anonymous Student - Thu Jul 29 00:20:41 2010
What does wa kirei ken sekushii desu mean?
Q. I think it might be vietnamese but i'm not sure.
Asked by Yo! Yolanda - Wed May 21 23:42:25 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. that's one of the japanese dialect. ___ wa kirei ken sekushii desu. =___ is sexy coz ___ is beautiful. ken = dakara = coz talker omitted subject.
Answered by askawow 47 - Thu May 22 05:53:04 2008
Q. I think it might be vietnamese but i'm not sure.
Asked by Yo! Yolanda - Wed May 21 23:42:25 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. that's one of the japanese dialect. ___ wa kirei ken sekushii desu. =___ is sexy coz ___ is beautiful. ken = dakara = coz talker omitted subject.
Answered by askawow 47 - Thu May 22 05:53:04 2008
What does the Japanese Word "desu" Mean?
Q. I have just started learning Japenese with Instant Immersion Deluexe WorkBook. I've noticed that they give very little translations and I find that hard to learn a new sentence or word. For example: the work "asa" means morning, but in the dialog, they added "desu" to "asa." So what does "desu" mean?
Asked by Gaara - Sun Jul 5 16:24:44 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Desu has no good equal in English. It is known as a polite copula and the translation of it to English can very from one of the "be" verbs to nothing at all. A sentence without desu means the exact same as a sentence with desu. In the case of "asa desu" it would be most commonly translated as "It is morning."
Answered by Belie - Sun Jul 5 16:36:18 2009
Q. I have just started learning Japenese with Instant Immersion Deluexe WorkBook. I've noticed that they give very little translations and I find that hard to learn a new sentence or word. For example: the work "asa" means morning, but in the dialog, they added "desu" to "asa." So what does "desu" mean?
Asked by Gaara - Sun Jul 5 16:24:44 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Desu has no good equal in English. It is known as a polite copula and the translation of it to English can very from one of the "be" verbs to nothing at all. A sentence without desu means the exact same as a sentence with desu. In the case of "asa desu" it would be most commonly translated as "It is morning."
Answered by Belie - Sun Jul 5 16:36:18 2009
Japanese, what is the negative form of desu?
Q. Watashi wa samu desu - I am sam. How do I say I am NOT sam, and a few other examples please.
Asked by Sam P - Tue Jul 14 15:48:32 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. - de wa arimasen - de wa nai - ja nai Watashi wa Sam ja nai! Sam de wa arimasen yo!
Answered by Kierphe - Tue Jul 14 15:55:33 2009
Q. Watashi wa samu desu - I am sam. How do I say I am NOT sam, and a few other examples please.
Asked by Sam P - Tue Jul 14 15:48:32 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. - de wa arimasen - de wa nai - ja nai Watashi wa Sam ja nai! Sam de wa arimasen yo!
Answered by Kierphe - Tue Jul 14 15:55:33 2009
What does wa watashi no ai desu mean?
Q. I am taking the lazy way of doing this haha because searching the net is rather...frustrating and I cant find this exact phrase. I was wandering if someone could please help me.
Asked by Kelsie - Fri Jan 1 05:23:47 2010 - - 2 Answers - 1 Comments
A. It could possibly mean 'Peace my love'. Depending on the Kanji. is it
Answered by Angelus - Fri Jan 1 05:34:06 2010
Q. I am taking the lazy way of doing this haha because searching the net is rather...frustrating and I cant find this exact phrase. I was wandering if someone could please help me.
Asked by Kelsie - Fri Jan 1 05:23:47 2010 - - 2 Answers - 1 Comments
A. It could possibly mean 'Peace my love'. Depending on the Kanji. is it
Answered by Angelus - Fri Jan 1 05:34:06 2010
What answers can you give for "O-genki desu ka?"?
Q. I know how to say "I'm fine" but I wanted to know how you say other ones. Like, Not so great and I'm great and stuff. I don't care about how formal it is, by the way.
Asked by Charlotte - Wed Nov 11 16:25:03 2009 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments
A. maamaa desu for "so-so". genki ja arimasen for "not good" Note though that "Ogenki desu ka" is like the Western "how ya doin'?" Any reply outside of "Fine thanks, and you?" is going to be awkward. it is a ritual greeting, and not a real attempt to extract information from you. Edit note: LOL at the cowardly downvoter! Let's see a better answer, hotshot :D
Answered by David - Wed Nov 11 16:46:39 2009
Q. I know how to say "I'm fine" but I wanted to know how you say other ones. Like, Not so great and I'm great and stuff. I don't care about how formal it is, by the way.
Asked by Charlotte - Wed Nov 11 16:25:03 2009 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments
A. maamaa desu for "so-so". genki ja arimasen for "not good" Note though that "Ogenki desu ka" is like the Western "how ya doin'?" Any reply outside of "Fine thanks, and you?" is going to be awkward. it is a ritual greeting, and not a real attempt to extract information from you. Edit note: LOL at the cowardly downvoter! Let's see a better answer, hotshot :D
Answered by David - Wed Nov 11 16:46:39 2009
What is the difference beetween imasu and desu (japanese)?
Q. What is the difference beetween imasu and desu (japanese)?
Asked by jungen - Fri Jun 12 10:31:13 2009 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. ![I'm not the one who gave them thumbs-down.]! 'imasu' means the existence of living things like takusanno hitoga imasu)[ There are lots of people.] 'desu' is a polite expression, which is usually used at the end of sentences, like (kyouwa tenkiga iiDESU)[It's fine today]. This English can be translated as (kyouwa tenkiga ii(ne)), meaning the same. But this Japanese is more casual than the sentence with DESU. So 'desu' itself doesn't have a special meaning. It just makes the sentences more polite/formal. First of all, i want you to understand the Japanese language doesn't always have to include a subject nor a verb. On that point, Japanes is different from most of European languages linguistically. 'desu' is NOT a verb, [cont.]
Answered by tokio toukyo - Fri Jun 12 10:48:13 2009
Q. What is the difference beetween imasu and desu (japanese)?
Asked by jungen - Fri Jun 12 10:31:13 2009 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. ![I'm not the one who gave them thumbs-down.]!
Answered by tokio toukyo - Fri Jun 12 10:48:13 2009
What word goes in the blank of the sentence kiyoi wa( )yoibi desu ka.?
Q. What word goes in the blank of the sentence kiyoi wa( )yoibi desu ka.?
Asked by joepaulino - Wed Apr 8 13:33:20 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. It's you in both cases, Kyou wa ()youbi desu ka. either kyou wa nanyoubi desu ka? as in what day is today? or they want you to plug in the day of the week.
Answered by austin c - Wed Apr 8 13:47:41 2009
Q. What word goes in the blank of the sentence kiyoi wa( )yoibi desu ka.?
Asked by joepaulino - Wed Apr 8 13:33:20 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. It's you in both cases, Kyou wa ()youbi desu ka. either kyou wa nanyoubi desu ka? as in what day is today? or they want you to plug in the day of the week.
Answered by austin c - Wed Apr 8 13:47:41 2009
From Yahoo Answer Search: 'desu'
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Brooklyn s Desu Design has made their name with furnishings and accessories that combine clean lines and industrial materials This year they debuted an elegant series of accessories
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Brooklyn s Desu Design has made their name with furnishings and accessories that combine clean lines and industrial materials This year they debuted an elegant series of accessories
Jouzu Desu Ne - Gothic.net Community
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Sun, 17 Jan 2010 14:35:32 GM
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Wintermute
Sun, 17 Jan 2010 14:35:32 GM
Jouzu . Desu. Ne Introductions. ... Old Today, 07:35 AM. Wintermute · Wintermute's Avatar. Join Date: Jan 2010. Location: Medford, Oregon, USA. Posts: 6. Jouzu . Desu. Ne. Well this little bio thing makes it nice and convenient. ...
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