How to Say ‘Do you have snacks too?’ in Japanese
おかしもありますか。
okashi mo ari masu ka
[oh-kah-shee moh ah-ree mahss kah]
💬 Usage Tip: [おかしも] means "snacks too." This sounds like you are asking about an additional item after discussing something else.
🇯🇵 In Japan: This is a natural follow-up question if you are shopping for several things at once.
Phrase Breakdown
おかし
okashi
[oh-kah-shee]
snacks / sweets
Refers to snack foods like candy or chips.
おかしはにんきです。
Snacks are popular.
も
mo
[moh]
also / too
Adds the meaning of 'also' to the noun before it.
パンもかいます。
I also buy bread.
ありますか
ari masu ka
is there?; do you have?
A polite question asking whether something exists or is available.
おかしはありますか。
Do you have snacks?
Words in this phrase
あり
ari
[ah-ree]
exist / have
Used to ask whether something is available or present.
ジュースがありました。
There was juice.
ます
masu
[mahss]
polite verb ending
Polite ending attached to verbs in standard conversation.
まいにちたべます。
I eat every day.
か
ka
[kah]
question marker
Shows that the sentence is a question.
まだありますか。
Do you still have it?
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