How to Say ‘I want to watch the match together.’ in Japanese
いっしょに試合を見たいね。
issho ni shiai o mi tai ne
[ees-shoh nee shee-ai oh mee tai neh]
💬 Usage Tip: [いっしょに] is “together,” [試合を] marks the thing watched, [見たい] is “want to watch,” and [ね] adds a shared, friendly feeling.
🇯🇵 In Japan: This sounds like a warm invitation without being too forceful, which is very natural in Japanese conversation.
Phrase Breakdown
いっしょに
issho ni
together
Used to say an action is done with someone else.
いっしょに見よう。
Let’s watch together.
Words in this phrase
いっしょ
issho
[ees-shoh]
together
A word meaning together, with someone else.
いっしょに行きましょう。
Let's go together.
に
ni
[nee]
together; in
Here に completes いっしょに to mean together.
家族に会って、いっしょに見ます。
I meet my family and then watch together.
試合
shiai
[shee-ai]
match; game
A noun meaning a sports match or game.
大事な試合ですね。
It's an important match, isn't it?
を
o
[oh]
object marker
A particle marking the direct object of a verb.
試合を見ます。
I watch the match.
見たい
mi tai
want to see; want to watch
The -たい form shows desire to do something.
試合を見たいです。
I want to watch the game.
Words in this phrase
見
mi
[mee]
see; watch
The verb stem of 見る, meaning to see or watch.
テレビで見ます。
I watch it on TV.
たい
tai
[tai]
want to
An ending expressing desire to do something.
決勝を見たいです。
I want to watch the final.
ね
ne
[neh]
isn't it; right
A sentence-ending particle seeking agreement or adding softness.
楽しみですね。
It's exciting, isn't it?
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