Ch. 8 — Useful Expressions Lesson 31 of 33

Going Out for Entertainment

娯楽

FSI Japanese FAST Course

What You Will Learn

  • Suggest outings
  • Buy tickets for events
  • Discuss preferences
  • Entertainment vocabulary

Lesson Material

In this lesson you will learn how to go out for entertainment in Japan. You will practice arranging a time and place to meet, inviting someone for a drink or dinner, accepting or declining an invitation, proposing an alternative, and buying tickets for events. This lesson covers essential social language for after-work outings — a cornerstone of Japanese social life.

何時に会いましょうか。 — Nan-ji ni aimashoo ka. — “What time shall we meet?”


Dialogues (会話)

Situation 1 — Ms. Nakajima invites Ms. Marshall to dinner

RomajiEnglish
Nakajima: Maasharu-san, konban issho ni shokuji ni ikimasen ka?Ms. Marshall, how about having dinner with me this evening?
Maasharu: Sore wa ii desu ne. Doko e ikimashoo ka?That sounds good. Where shall we go?
Nakajima: Chuugoku-ryoori wa doo desu ka?How about Chinese food?
Maasharu: Ii desu ne.Fine.
Nakajima: Jaa, ii resutoran o shitteimasu kara, soko e ikimashoo. Nan-ji ni shimashoo ka?Well, I know a good restaurant; let’s go there. What time shall we make it?
Maasharu: Shichi-ji wa doo desu ka?How about seven o’clock?
Nakajima: Ee, ii desu yo. Jaa, watakushi ga Amerikan Sentaa e ikimasu.Fine. Then I’ll come to the American Center.
Maasharu: Soo desu ka. Jaa, onegaishimasu.All right. Thanks!

Situation 2 — Mr. Tanaka invites Mr. Burns to see sumo

RomajiEnglish
Tanaka: Baanzu-san, sumoo o mi ni ikimasen ka?Mr. Burns, shall we go see a sumo match?
Baanzu: Ii desu ne. Itsu desu ka?That sounds great. When is it?
Tanaka: Do-yoobi desu.On Saturday.
Baanzu: Soo desu ka. Zannen desu ga, Do-yoobi wa chotto…Oh. That’s too bad. Saturday isn’t so good for me.
Tanaka: Soo desu ka? Nichi-yoobi mo dame desu ka?Is that so? Is Sunday bad too?
Baanzu: Aa, Nichi-yoobi wa ii desu yo.Oh, Sunday is fine.
Tanaka: Jaa, Nichi-yoobi ni shimashoo. Akasaka Mitsuke no eki no mae de yo-ji ni aimashoo.Then let’s make it Sunday. Let’s meet at four in front of Akasaka Mitsuke station.
Baanzu: Wakarimashita. Nichi-yoobi, yo-ji desu ne?OK. At four, this Sunday, right?

Situation 3 — Ms. Smith buys tickets at the Kabukiza ticket window

RomajiEnglish
Sumisu: Juugo-nichi no kippu, san-mai onegaishimasu.Three tickets for the 15th, please.
Nihonjin: Hiru no bu desu ka, yoru no bu desu ka?The afternoon performance or the evening performance?
Sumisu: Yoru no bu desu.The evening performance.
Nihonjin: Dewa, koko to koko ga nokotteimasu.OK. Here and here are still available.
Sumisu: Koko, onegaishimasu.Here, please.
Nihonjin: Hai. Ni-man-en de gozaimasu.All right. That’ll be 20,000 yen.

Key Vocabulary (語彙)

RomajiKanaEnglish
shokujiしょくじmeal
shokuji ni ikimasen kaしょくじにいきませんかwould you like to go out for dinner?
nomi ni ikimasen kaのみにいきませんかwould you like to go out for a drink?
Chuugoku-ryooriちゅうごくりょうりChinese cuisine
sumooすもうsumo wrestling
mi ni ikimasen kaみにいきませんかwould you like to go see…?
zannen desu gaざんねんですがit’s too bad, it’s unfortunate
dameだめno good, won’t do
aimashooあいましょうlet’s meet
hiru no buひるのぶafternoon performance
yoru no buよるのぶevening performance
nokotteimasuのこっていますremain, be left (available)
kippuきっぷticket
…maiまいcounter for flat objects (tickets)

Grammar & Usage Notes

1. Inviting someone with -masen ka

The negative question form is used as a polite invitation:

Nomi ni ikimasen ka? — “Shall we go out for a drink?” Shokuji ni ikimasen ka? — “Shall we go out for a meal?” (Kabuki) o mi ni ikimasen ka? — “Shall we go see (Kabuki)?“

2. Accepting or declining

Accepting: Ii desu ne. / Sore wa ii desu ne. / Ee, ikimashoo. — “Sounds good / Let’s go.”

Declining indirectly: Kyoo wa chotto… — “Today is (not so good for me)…” The sentence trails off — a polite, indirect refusal typical of Japanese.

3. Proposing a time and place to meet

Proposing a time: (Time) wa doo desu ka? — “How about (time)?” Proposing a place: (Place) wa doo desu ka? — “How about (place)?”

Using -mashoo ka: (Time) ni shimashoo ka? — “Shall we make it (time)?” (Place) de aimashoo ka? — “Shall we meet at (place)?”

Note that ni is used after time expressions and de is used after place expressions.

Mitsukoshi no mae de san-ji ni aimashoo ka? — “Shall we meet in front of Mitsukoshi at 3:00?“

4. Buying tickets

Specify the date, performance type, and number of tickets:

(date) no kippu, (number)-mai onegaishimasu.

For plays with matinee and evening shows, you may need to specify hiru no bu (afternoon) or yoru no bu (evening).

5. Types of cuisine

RomajiEnglish
Nihon-ryoori / washokuJapanese cuisine
Chuugoku-ryooriChinese cuisine
Furansu-ryooriFrench cuisine
Itaria-ryooriItalian cuisine

Practice Exercises (練習)

A. Production — Buying Shinkansen tickets

Buy reserved-seat tickets using the formula:

(Date) (time) no (train name) no shitee-seki, (destination) made (number)-mai onegaishimasu.

#DateTimeTrainDestinationTickets
12nd11:00 a.m.KodamaShizuoka1
28th4:40 p.m.HikariHakata3
320th7:28 a.m.HikariNagoya1
44th8:30 a.m.HikariKyoto4
51st9:16 a.m.KodamaAtami1
614th5:00 p.m.HikariShin Osaka3

Time note: a.m. = gozen (午前), p.m. = gogo (午後)

B. Production — Inviting and responding

Round 1: The instructor invites you to go out for a drink or dinner. Accept with Ii desu ne. Ikimashoo. or decline with Kyoo wa chotto…

Round 2: You invite the instructor using these prompts:

#Invitation
1Go out for dinner tonight
2Go to a restaurant
3See a show at the National Theater
4Go to a beer garden tonight
5Go out for a drink tonight

C. Comprehension and Production — Proposing alternatives

Student A proposes, Student B suggests an alternative:

Student A proposesStudent B suggests
Itaria-ryooriFuransu-ryoori
ku-ji (9:00)hachi-ji (8:00)
bifuteki (steak)osushi
Do-yoobi (Saturday)Nichi-yoobi (Sunday)
wain (wine)osake
baa (bar)biagaaden (beer garden)

Pattern: A: (option) ni shimashoo ka? → B: (alternative) wa doo desu ka?

D. Production — Deciding when and where to meet

Student A asks when to meet. Student B answers from the list:

#Meeting time
110 a.m. tomorrow
28 p.m. at night
3Sunday morning
4Wednesday afternoon
53 p.m. on the fifth

E. Production — Deciding time and place

#PlaceTime
1coffee shop3:00
2in front of Mitsukoshi5:30
3American Consulate2:00
4bookstore4:30
5in front of U.S. Embassy6:00

Pattern: Dokode nan-ji ni aimashoo ka?(Place) de (time) ni aimashoo.


Cultural Notes

Going out for drinks in Japan

Japanese colleagues, especially men, often go out for drinks after work. Common destinations include:

RomajiEnglish
biagaadenbeer garden (seasonal, usually on rooftops)
sunakkusnack bar (small bar with a mama-san)
baabar
yakitori-yayakitori (grilled chicken) shop

When a Japanese colleague invites you with Konban nomi ni ikimasen ka?, it is a friendly gesture and an important part of building relationships.

Buying event tickets

Tickets for major plays, sports events, and movies are usually available at pureegaido (Play Guide) counters located in department stores and major shopping areas. For Kabuki and other traditional theater, some performances have both an afternoon (hiru no bu) and evening (yoru no bu) show.

Shinkansen reserved seats

Long-distance train tickets and reserved-seat tickets (shitee-ken) for the JR Shinkansen can be bought at the Midori no madoguchi (Green Window) at train stations, identified by a green sign.