Sign In

Dictionary

Recent Searches

Japanese Sentences with English Translations - Sentences [ったく]

Search by Japanese

字▼

Search by English Meaning

I don't know this problem altogether.
I have nothing to do with him.
We held many negotiations but to no purpose.
Our characters are completely different.
Our meeting was quite accidental.
Our meeting was purely accidental.
Our decision to go to Portugal was quite arbitrary.
There is no reason why I should help him.
My meeting her at the station was a pure accident.
I owe it entirely to you that I have succeeded thus far.
The man I saw yesterday was a complete gentleman.
What we have is one thing and what we are is quite another.
This year's fashions are quite different from those of last year.
This year's fashions are completely different to last year's.
The GNP has been growing at a snail's pace.
If you ask me, reading comics is a complete waste of time.
At present he lives on his own and the world is nothing to him.
At present he lives by himself and the rest of the world means nothing to him.
Since there is no air on the moon, there is no sound at all.
It is one thing to make a plan and quite another to carry it out.

This site uses the EDICT and KANJIDIC dictionary files. These files are the property of the Electronic Dictionary Research and Development Group, and are used in conformance with the Group's licence.