At the moment I live in Yokohama but I must admit that I miss a lot of things from my home country. Even though I think Japan is an amazing country. I think it's totally normal to miss things from your home country even while appreciating things in the country that you are living in :)
I didn't know how much thought you put into what you speak about (and in what way you say it) in Tanaka Radio! It's really thoughtful and sweet ❤️ Thank you for making these kind of videos, I enjoy them a lot.
I'm from England and travelled through Asia, Australia, NZ, and America when I was younger. I thought I'd be a lot more homesick, as I'm a sentimental person, but suprisingly I didn't feel that way very much. I loved eating new foods every day, hearing new languages, seeing people's ordinary lives being very different from what I was used to. After a year however, I realised that I began to really miss the green grass, trees, and gardens from home. I also missed how quiet and orderly things are in the UK, compared to some places. Then I began to miss the food, especially chips and gravy! When I got back, I also realised how much I missed hearing the different accents in the UK, particularly from my hometown. It was nice to be able to talk without making my accent more neutral to help other people understand me. Funnily enough, one of the things I missed most on the rest of my trip was seeing the friendly characters in Japan! It was the first country I landed in, and I loved seeing them everywhere. I took lots of photos of them! I think my favourite was one in a train station of a station master with a little mustache - so much friendlier than information posters in other countries. Wow, I've not thought about any of this for a long time. Thank you for making me think of them, and for your awesome channel!
Yeah, the cutie-pie かわいい characters everywhere. I love that about Japan. BTW, I'm a 56-year-old regular English guy. But I also love the cuddly characters everywhere in Japan.
I've never left America before, and the longest trips I've ever done was road trips. I've done two road trips, once up the west coast and once up the east, and they both lasted about a week. I've never really been away from home long enough to miss it, though the vacation on the east coast was actually two weeks, as we spent one week at Disney World before starting our drive. By the end of that trip I was tired and a little irritable, but I still wasn't really happy to get home. Mostly because I began the day in a beautiful and cool valley with fragrant wild flowers and then ended back at home in a desert...
I'm visiting Tokyo in two weeks. What will I miss here? I will miss my elderly mother for sure. I'll probably miss our warm, dry weather here in Arizona. I think the thing I will miss the most is Diet Coke, which is something I'm not supposed to drink but I do anyway.
I travel from the US to the country of Peru for around 2 weeks while in college. I quickly discovered that I really missed grass. I'm from Indiana and we have lots of farm land, parks full of green grassy fields and trees. So to see nothing but cement or dirt was kind of depressing. Secondly I missed something that I was also kinda confused by. Toilet seats in public bathrooms. They had the modern porcelain toilet found all of the US but it was like they simply forgot to put on the toilet seat. I can only assume that this was some kind of sanitation practice. Needless to say I was overjoyed to see toilet seats in public bathrooms once I returned to the US and I could tell I was flying of my home state of Indiana by the corn and soy beans fields. It's truly interesting what you miss when you're far from home. I would love to go back to Peru but I definitely would still miss grass and toilet seats.
When i lived i. Gumma maebashi i missed the kyushu ramen that serve with spicy veggies that is unlimited and soba udon in mt akagiyama all veggies tempura are the best 😂❤❤❤❤ i missed all the food in japan ❤
currently listening at work, I cannot understand it, but the more I listen the more the words are separating. I am starting to hear the odd words like eat, water, japan. I can read fairly well (slowly) and speak some japanese to people but I cannot hear anything anyone else says to me, its jiberish. hoping the more I listen to your videos the more my ears will like it
とても便利、おもしろいなビデオ!アメリカ人です、エウロッポと日本と住んでいました。どこでも違います、やっぱり。。。I'm sorry, my Japanese is not good enough to finish this thought. "Of course, everywhere you go you will miss something about it when you leave." 日本語で、なんと言います?
Thank you for making such beautiful podcast! 😍 I understand very little now, but hope to be able to learn more with some time. I have a favour to ask of you: Would you please not have music while you are talking? It makes it much more difficult to hear what you're saying, and to consentrate. 🙏 ありがとうございます
Yes, me too. I'm English, and live in Austria. Ironically, "bidet" is French, and we used to have at least a basic version of a bidet in many bathrooms. But these days you never see them in Europe. I wanted to install a Toto Washlet, but there's always some problem with the electricity. I really miss that civilised aspect of Japan!
Yes, all over Europe I've always had a bathtub, of course. Mind you, they're a different shape - in a short, deep Japanese tub it's easier to sit there in deep water. And anyway, these days in Europe, we can't afford to properly fill our big tubs with nice, hot water.
When I moved to another country I missed the food prepared by my parents, even if I could cook pretty well, theirs was more special.
pure happines in audio format
At the moment I live in Yokohama but I must admit that I miss a lot of things from my home country. Even though I think Japan is an amazing country. I think it's totally normal to miss things from your home country even while appreciating things in the country that you are living in :)
I miss bread and cheese variety...
私は京都で生まれましたが、5歳の時にイギリスに引っ越しました. I miss Japan. 日本の大学に行きたいです. please keep making this series ❤
Pls make more podcasts like this.I love to hear your voice.I’m totally falling in love with your voice.
I didn't know how much thought you put into what you speak about (and in what way you say it) in Tanaka Radio!
It's really thoughtful and sweet ❤️
Thank you for making these kind of videos, I enjoy them a lot.
I'm from England and travelled through Asia, Australia, NZ, and America when I was younger. I thought I'd be a lot more homesick, as I'm a sentimental person, but suprisingly I didn't feel that way very much. I loved eating new foods every day, hearing new languages, seeing people's ordinary lives being very different from what I was used to.
After a year however, I realised that I began to really miss the green grass, trees, and gardens from home. I also missed how quiet and orderly things are in the UK, compared to some places. Then I began to miss the food, especially chips and gravy!
When I got back, I also realised how much I missed hearing the different accents in the UK, particularly from my hometown. It was nice to be able to talk without making my accent more neutral to help other people understand me.
Funnily enough, one of the things I missed most on the rest of my trip was seeing the friendly characters in Japan! It was the first country I landed in, and I loved seeing them everywhere. I took lots of photos of them! I think my favourite was one in a train station of a station master with a little mustache - so much friendlier than information posters in other countries.
Wow, I've not thought about any of this for a long time. Thank you for making me think of them, and for your awesome channel!
Yeah, the cutie-pie かわいい characters everywhere. I love that about Japan. BTW, I'm a 56-year-old regular English guy. But I also love the cuddly characters everywhere in Japan.
I am very big fan of yours . Your voice and explanation are just perfect . Keep doing your good work
とっても便利、本当にありがとうございます、私はスーダン人。
Thank you very much ขอบคุณมากค่ะ
I've never left America before, and the longest trips I've ever done was road trips. I've done two road trips, once up the west coast and once up the east, and they both lasted about a week. I've never really been away from home long enough to miss it, though the vacation on the east coast was actually two weeks, as we spent one week at Disney World before starting our drive. By the end of that trip I was tired and a little irritable, but I still wasn't really happy to get home. Mostly because I began the day in a beautiful and cool valley with fragrant wild flowers and then ended back at home in a desert...
私も日本にいた時、色々なキャラクターを見るのが好きだった。全部かわいい。
Thank you for these videos! 😊
分かりやすいです
Great channel
日本語を勉強してる中国人です。動画は面白くて分かりやすいから、いいヒヤリングと思います。
ありがとうございます。今度もよろしくお願いします。
声が聞くやすい💙
Mặc dù ko hiểu lắm nhưng mà nghe giọng đọc e rất là thích ạ.
I'm visiting Tokyo in two weeks. What will I miss here? I will miss my elderly mother for sure. I'll probably miss our warm, dry weather here in Arizona. I think the thing I will miss the most is Diet Coke, which is something I'm not supposed to drink but I do anyway.
I travel from the US to the country of Peru for around 2 weeks while in college. I quickly discovered that I really missed grass. I'm from Indiana and we have lots of farm land, parks full of green grassy fields and trees. So to see nothing but cement or dirt was kind of depressing. Secondly I missed something that I was also kinda confused by. Toilet seats in public bathrooms. They had the modern porcelain toilet found all of the US but it was like they simply forgot to put on the toilet seat. I can only assume that this was some kind of sanitation practice. Needless to say I was overjoyed to see toilet seats in public bathrooms once I returned to the US and I could tell I was flying of my home state of Indiana by the corn and soy beans fields. It's truly interesting what you miss when you're far from home. I would love to go back to Peru but I definitely would still miss grass and toilet seats.
When i lived i. Gumma maebashi i missed the kyushu ramen that serve with spicy veggies that is unlimited and soba udon in mt akagiyama all veggies tempura are the best 😂❤❤❤❤ i missed all the food in japan ❤
I listen to people talking in Japanese sometimes so I can learn Japanese, but it seems impossible, it's very hard for me to learn Japanese.
Amo este canal pero después de tres videos termino agotada por la música de fondo.
Saludos
currently listening at work, I cannot understand it, but the more I listen the more the words are separating. I am starting to hear the odd words like eat, water, japan. I can read fairly well (slowly) and speak some japanese to people but I cannot hear anything anyone else says to me, its jiberish. hoping the more I listen to your videos the more my ears will like it
とても便利、おもしろいなビデオ!アメリカ人です、エウロッポと日本と住んでいました。どこでも違います、やっぱり。。。I'm sorry, my Japanese is not good enough to finish this thought. "Of course, everywhere you go you will miss something about it when you leave." 日本語で、なんと言います?
Thank you for making such beautiful podcast! 😍 I understand very little now, but hope to be able to learn more with some time. I have a favour to ask of you: Would you please not have music while you are talking? It makes it much more difficult to hear what you're saying, and to consentrate. 🙏 ありがとうございます
Do katakana and hiragana videos 🙏🙏
i'm surprised to hear the thing about showers. bathtubs are very common in the USA, too.
Everytime I travel to a European country the thing that I miss most is the bidet
Yes, me too. I'm English, and live in Austria. Ironically, "bidet" is French, and we used to have at least a basic version of a bidet in many bathrooms. But these days you never see them in Europe. I wanted to install a Toto Washlet, but there's always some problem with the electricity. I really miss that civilised aspect of Japan!
Tanaka san mario des dake japan ❤️❤️❤️
こんにちは。私にとって、一番難しいことは話している日本人を聞いていることと返事してみたときです。会話なんて、何度もやってみて、友達とか先生とか、会話のやり方があまりよくなかったかもしれません。ですから、会話の練習し方を教えてお願いします🥲
podcast please
5:37
海外にいた事ありませんです
(つД`)ノ
私も、。゚(´つω•`。)゚。
😍❤️
Indonesian sub おねがい
いまどこにすんでいますか?
paypalで払っているの方がいいでしょう、これできる?
Most european houses have bathtubs too? Why did you anticipate, that there would be no bathtubs in Europe?
Yes, all over Europe I've always had a bathtub, of course. Mind you, they're a different shape - in a short, deep Japanese tub it's easier to sit there in deep water. And anyway, these days in Europe, we can't afford to properly fill our big tubs with nice, hot water.