How to Say ‘Please write your address.’ in Japanese
住所を書いてください。
juusho o kai te kudasai
[juu-sho oh kai teh koo-dah-sai]
💬 Usage Tip: Another useful form instruction. [住所] + [を書いてください] = "please write your address."
🇯🇵 In Japan: Japanese addresses are often written in a different order from many countries, so copying from official documents is safest.
Phrase Breakdown
住所
juusho
[juu-sho]
address
Means your home address, often needed on official forms.
住所を書いてください。
Please write your address.
を書いてください
o kai te kudasai
please write
A polite instruction asking someone to write something.
ここに住所を書いてください。
Please write your address here.
Words in this phrase
を
o
[oh]
object marker
Marks 住所 as the thing to write.
住所を書いてください。
Please write your address.
書い
kai
[kai]
write
Stem of 書く, meaning to write.
ここに書いてください。
Please write it here.
て
te
[teh]
and / te-form connector
Te-form connector used with ください for polite requests.
書いてください。
Please write it.
ください
kudasai
[koo-dah-sai]
please
Makes the request polite and suitable for service interactions.
待ってください。
Please wait.
Get the Full Learning Experience
This lesson is just a preview. Download PrettyFluent to practice pronunciation, roleplay conversations, and master vocabulary with spaced repetition.
Pronunciation Feedback
AI-powered speech recognition to perfect your accent
Spaced Repetition
Retain vocabulary long-term with smart practice
Immersive Roleplaying
Practice real conversations with AI partners
Custom Scenarios
Request lessons tailored to your specific needs
What Learners Are Saying
“Teaching in Osaka and I wanted to connect with my students beyond the classroom. The everyday conversation scenarios made my Japanese feel natural, not textbook-y.”
Mia S., 25, English Teacher
“Moved to Tokyo and the polite vs. casual speech levels were killing me. This app breaks it all down with real scenarios. My coworkers noticed the difference in weeks.”
Kevin Z., 31, Game Developer
“I tried five different apps before this one. The roleplay conversations are what finally made things click. I actually remember what I learn now.”
Sofia R., 31, Marketing Manager