What is your name

  1. audio play icon
  2. Name Definition & Meaning
  3. Kimi no Na wa.
  4. Type Your Name — What color is your name? ®
  5. adjectives
  6. Why do we use "what" instead of "who" in "what is your name?
  7. tense


Download: What is your name
Size: 21.53 MB

audio play icon

LISA: Ich heiße Nico. EMMA: Hallo, Nico. LISA: Hallo. Also: Hallo, wie heißt du? NICO: Hallo, ich heiße Nico. Und wie heißt du? LISA: Ich heiße Lisa. EMMA: Nein, du heißt Nico. LISA: Das ist Emma. Emma spinnt gerade. EMMA: Ich … heiße … Ey! LISA: Emma! EMMA: Aber jetzt ist das „N“ weg! Das war Nico! NICO: Ich? LISA: Moment bitte. Ich muss noch kurz tanken. NICO: Taxi! Stopp!

Name Definition & Meaning

Noun Please write your name on this line. State your name and occupation. I refused to give them my name. Mark Twain's real name was Samuel Clemens. She registered at the hotel under a false name. My full name is Susan Elaine Smith. We had to memorize the names of all the countries in Africa. “What's your dog's name?” “His name is Sandy.” This is his song “Loving You” from the album of the same name.

Kimi no Na wa.

Name Kanji 君の名は。 Rōmaji Kimi no Na wa. English Your name. Information Director Writer Producer Genki Kawamura Katsuhiro Takei Kōichirō Itō Distributor Toho Funimation Release Dates July 3, 2016 (Anime Expo) August 26, 2016 (Japan) December 28, 2016 (France) April 7, 2017 (North America) Running Time 107 minutes Country Japan Language Japanese Box office $361 million Kimi no Na wa. ( 君の名は。 , Your name.) is a 2016 Japanese anime romantic fantasy drama film directed, written, and edited by Your Name was animated by CoMix Wave Films and distributed by Toho. The film premiered at the Anime Expo 2016 convention in Los Angeles, California on July 3, 2016, and premiered in Japan on August 26, 2016. The film has received critical acclaim, being praised for its animation and emotional impact, and was also a commercial success, becoming the fourth highest-grossing film of all time in Japan and the highest-grossing anime film worldwide, with, as of January 15, 2017, a gross of over $330 million USD (United States Dollars). Note: This is a generic section stub. Expand it by clicking [ edit] to right of the section title. A comet appears and mysteriously affects and connects the lives of two teenagers of the same age, a boy in the big, bustling city of Tokyo and a girl in a country village where life is slow but idyllic. They find for unknown reasons, they wake up in each other's bodies for weeks at a time. At first, they both think these experiences are just vivid dreams, but when the ...

Type Your Name — What color is your name? ®

What color is your name? This Synesthesia Me Visualizer shows you the “synesthesia" version of your name, or any name. The first line is your name in light blue text, and the second line is your name shown as Synesthesia colored blocks for each letter. Try it out, save your image and share it with your friends. If you’d like a print of your name,

adjectives

After thinking it through, I think the best response of the teacher (you!) for this particular student once he or she asked, I think we should say "what are your name?" since your/her takes "are"! is probably, Because name takes "is"! And if he or she looked confused, then you could add, It's because name takes "is", so you should say, "What is your name?", or "What are your names?". If your course is about conversational English and it doesn't emphasize grammar, perhaps this is the best way to go, in my opinion. There is no grammar terminology in the reply. (Please note that I avoided even using the word "either" intentionally.) • My point is your reply should match your student. It's obvious that this student understands the word take, and he or she could formulate questions and at least understand simple answers, and yet still couldn't tell which word is the main word of a phrase, indicating his or her unclear understanding on common English sentence structures. However, if your course also includes grammar, then you can take it as a good opportunity to discuss with your student(s) the concept of singular vs. plural in English, and the possessive form of you (which is your) and other pronouns, and how to find the main word in a noun phrase, and sentence structures in English, and so on. since your/her takes are!!!! I think this is an example of students having learned some "rules" by heart which aren't rules. Your is the possessive of you, and you can be singular or plu...

Why do we use "what" instead of "who" in "what is your name?

"Who" refers to people. "Who is your wife", "Who is your boss?", "Who is the local mayor?", "Who took out the rubbish" are all examples of "who", because they are asking for the person. But a name is not a person, it is an identifier of a person. "What is your name?", "What is your address?", "What is your car's number plate?" are all identifiers, not people. So, you use WHO when you want to find out which person, otherwise, you use WHAT. The Name of a person is not the person, it is one of several identifiers associated with the person. Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language & Usage Stack Exchange! • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research! But avoid … • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers. • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience. To learn more, see our

tense

Quite often when I am talking over phone with some customer service representative, if they'd need to ask my name again they'd go like What was your name? Similarly I heard my teacher asking another student, who was just about to leave the class room, Did you want to stay for another English class? I don't get why is he using past tense to mean if the student wants to stay now or not. In the former situation it sound like if I had changed my name and they are asking what was my old name. So, why do some native speakers use past tense to mean present tense? The past form is often used tentatively, like this, to 'push the reset button' on an earlier situation or topic. In your case, the rep is probably trained to give customers freedom to express their concerns before introducing any technical formalities. The past form acknowledges (or implies) that you already gave your name, to diminish any annoyance you may feel at having to repeat yourself or to take any 'blame' if in fact you didn't give it. In the second case, we don't have enough context to know why the teacher used the past form: it suggests that he had gotten the impresssion earlier that the student might want to stay. • On first communication with a person "WHAT IS YOUR NAME?" is correct and polite, whereas on first communication "WHAT WAS YOUR NAME?" presents as rude, ignorant and assuming there was a name change at some time. • If the name was given, and for some reason the person requiring to refresh their know...