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How to read Japanese after hard work?

There are two ways to speak Japanese hard.

1, boss to subordinate:

ごごろぅ) じさまです

ごҔ (くろぅ) さまでした

2, subordinates to the boss, or colleagues:

ぉつかれ🁸さまです.

ぉつかれ🁸さまでした.

です is the present tense and でした is the past tense.

If you insist on the difference and want to emphasize the state of "hard work", use です; If you want to emphasize the hard work of "the whole day has passed", use でした.

However, this is not critical in normal use. です, でした will do.

Extended data:

Pronunciation characteristics of Japanese;

The pronunciation of Japanese Chinese characters can be roughly divided into three types: the first one is called "Five Tones", the latter one is called "Hanyin", and the last one is called "Tangyin". For example, the word "Jing" is pronounced as "キョ" in the word "Tokyo" and "キョ" in the word "Shi Jing".

In Japanese pinyin reading of Chinese characters, Chinese pronunciation is the majority, followed by Wu pronunciation, and Tang pronunciation is rare. In addition, there is a kind of idiomatic pronunciation (idiomatic pronunciation), which is neither pentatonic nor Chinese. For example, both Wu Yin and Han Yin pronounce カィ, but only when they get used to it.

There is a relatively neat correspondence between Japanese pentatonic and China pentatonic and China Middle Ages.

Examples of sound reading:

Ma (Wu) (Han) (Tang)

Huo (Wu) (Han) (Tang)

Hui (Wu), Shi (Han)

Angry (Wu) Han

(Wu Han)

Baidu Encyclopedia-Japanese