popri
Member
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2006
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Japanese
- Home Country
- Japan
- Current Location
- Japan
Today, I’m writing this because I’d like to know about European and American culture.
Let’s suppose you are a junior high school kid and you need to answer his/her teacher’s question in class. What do you say when you don’t know the correct answer? I’d be really appreciate it if you write sentences like a playscript writer does.
An English conversation book written in Japanese says ‘Sorry, I don’t know’. But I feel a kind of awkward because I wonder if junior high school kids would say ‘sorry’ to his/her teachers, which I understand the phrase a casual way to say I’m sorry. It would be sort of rare in Japanese culture. Many Japanese students would say ‘I’m sorry’, not ‘sorry’. At the same time, I wonder if students would apologize for their not knowing the correct answers in class. What do you think about it?
Let’s suppose you are a junior high school kid and you need to answer his/her teacher’s question in class. What do you say when you don’t know the correct answer? I’d be really appreciate it if you write sentences like a playscript writer does.
An English conversation book written in Japanese says ‘Sorry, I don’t know’. But I feel a kind of awkward because I wonder if junior high school kids would say ‘sorry’ to his/her teachers, which I understand the phrase a casual way to say I’m sorry. It would be sort of rare in Japanese culture. Many Japanese students would say ‘I’m sorry’, not ‘sorry’. At the same time, I wonder if students would apologize for their not knowing the correct answers in class. What do you think about it?
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