ksiadz
Hmmm... can I use and when can I use 'ore' and 'boku'. What's the diffirence?
29 de dic. de 2007 14:17
Respuestas · 4
1
Both ore and boku are the first person used by men in a casual situation(when you are talking with friends/someone who you are close to) as Ms Sa-sa mentions. In a formal situation, written language, and to someone who you have to be polite such as your boss, teacher, who you don't know, watashi has to be used. The difference between ore and boku is that boku can be polite while ore can't. In fact, some men use boku even in a formal situation instead on watashi, and it doesn't sound rude in most cases. Compare the politeness below... watashi > boku > ore I hope this will help you a little.
1 de enero de 2008
It means I but ore おれ 俺 male ×business ○friend <  boku ぼく 僕 male ×business ○friend <  watashi わたし 私 both ○business ○friend <  watakushi both わたくし 私 both ○business (strange)friend < polite     
3 de enero de 2008
Ore sounds more masculine than Boku.
1 de enero de 2008
They mean the same thing (I/me). Both are gender-specific to males, however, and they're informal.
31 de diciembre de 2007
¿No has encontrado las respuestas?
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