Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Common sense needed to go to Japan
Common sense needed to go to Japan
1. Cross the street and take the crosswalk.
Pedestrians should obey the traffic rules when crossing the road, watch the traffic lights, take the crosswalk, and don't cross the road.
Smoking is forbidden in public places.
Smoking is forbidden in many places in Japan. Please go to the designated smoking corner if you need to smoke. Smoking is forbidden in the streets of Japan, and it is also forbidden to smoke while walking. Violation of the regulations will face a fine of up to 50,000 yen (about 2,525 yuan).
3. Don't litter.
Peel confetti and soda bottles should be put into the dustbin. Not littering is a public morality that every Japanese abides by, and foreign tourists are no exception.
4. Garbage should be classified.
The garbage in public places in Japan is generally classified, and there are obvious marks on the trash cans, which are basically divided into combustible and nonflammable categories. If it is at the station, the classification of garbage is more detailed, including magazines and newspapers, glass bottles and cans of drinks, which are flammable and nonflammable. Contaminated garbage such as batteries and spray cans should be placed separately.
5. Don't point fingers at each other.
It is impolite to point at others when talking or discussing. Refers to people who usually show the superiority of actors, while the accused party will be demeaning. Similarly, you can't point at others with chopsticks and feet.
6. Queue in public.
When taking a tram in Japan, passengers have to queue up in order. When the car stops, passengers will be divided into two lines on both sides of the door, and get off first and then get on. Whenever the tram arrives at the station, passengers on the tram should be careful not to stand at the door of the carriage, so as not to hinder other passengers from getting on and off. The escalators in the city should also stand on the same side, leaving a passage for those who are in a hurry to go first.
7. Keep the car quiet.
Japanese don't talk on the phone in the car. If they answer the phone, they should also keep their voices to a minimum, answer briefly and then hang up. Try to keep quiet when reading, texting and making up in the carriage, otherwise people around you may be "speechless". Remember not to eat in the carriage.
8. Take off your shoes before entering the door.
Do as Romans do in Rome. Take off your shoes before entering the house. Whether entering a hotel room or visiting a Japanese home, you can't violate the custom of changing slippers in Japan.
9. Don't tip when taking a taxi.
Japan, like many Asian countries, has no habit of tipping, and there are no rules for tipping in hotels, restaurants, tourist attractions or taking tourist buses. Because all the service charges are included in the bill. Therefore, customers don't have to reinvent the wheel. When taking a taxi, passengers don't have to open and close the doors themselves. The driver will press the button to open and close the doors for the guests, and you can "walk away" by yourself after getting off.
X. bathing in hot springs
In Japan, you can't go to a hot spring wrapped in a towel. Sit on the bench first (don't stand to avoid splashing on others), wash your body with a shower, and then soak in the hot spring. Women should tie up their hair with towels or rubber bands, and don't let it fall into hot springs. At the same time, be careful not to bring towels into the bath, let alone use soap to take a bath.
2. What should I pay attention to when going to Japan?
1, don't forget to take off your shoes.
In Japan, when in Rome, do as the Romans do, whether entering a hotel room, visiting a Japanese home, or entering a conference room or office. In short, as long as you enter the house, you have to change your slippers, sometimes twice. The custom of changing slippers is inviolable in Japan. Don't forget to take off your shoes before entering the house.
Never go out without an umbrella.
Take an umbrella when you go out. Japan has a maritime climate, with uncertain weather. Take an umbrella and get ready. Take a folding umbrella when traveling, and it is best to take a gentleman's umbrella when traveling or visiting relatives. Because in Japan, most shops and even private houses have an umbrella basket in front of them. A long umbrella can stand in the basket, but a folding umbrella can't be put in the basket.
You don't have to tip.
Japan, like many Asian countries, has no habit of tipping. Because the service charge of 10%- 15% has been added to the bills of hotels and restaurants. If the taxi has no special service, there is no need to tip. As for spending in beauty salons, barbershops, bars and nightclubs, there is no need to tip.
4. Drink tap water when you are thirsty
Tap water in Japan can be drunk directly. There are running water nozzles in stations and large public places. Both hotels and restaurants have mineral water for guests to drink.
5. Your own mobile phone can't be used
You don't need to bring a mobile phone to Japan. Because the standards are different, it is impossible to use your own mobile phone there. In addition, the voltage in Japan is 1 10 volts (mainly two-pin flat plugs), so battery chargers such as cameras and video recorders cannot be used unless they are compatible with 1 10-240 volts.
6. What to buy and what not to buy
The quality of small household appliances in Japanese duty-free shops is very good and the price is cheap. It is generous and affordable to take some home as gifts for relatives and friends. It is not cost-effective to buy small boutique toys, clothes and shoes. Most of them are made in China, and they are surprisingly expensive. In addition, Japan's film and camera lithium battery are also more expensive than domestic ones, so you can take more abroad. Department stores and shops in Japan close around 7 pm (only a few are open until 9 pm), so it is almost impossible to go shopping at night.
7. The subway is convenient and cheap.
If you want to go shopping by yourself in Japan, you'd better take the subway because it's the cheapest. The subway traffic in Japan is very developed, the subway lines are as dense as cobwebs, and the subway stations go directly to the bottom of high-rise buildings, so there is a lot of choice. Japan's consumption is very high, so taking a taxi is of course expensive. If you pay for it yourself, go out and take the subway. In addition, if you travel and stay in a hotel, you can't speak Japanese. If you go out by yourself, you'd better take a business card of the hotel, so that in case you get lost, you can get a ride back.
8. It's inconvenient to change money.
In Japan, money must be exchanged at foreign exchange banks or other legal money exchange offices. In addition, you must show your passport. However, the Japanese bank exchange business only takes place between 9 am and 3 pm. In addition, banks are closed all day on Saturdays, Sundays and major holidays. So money can only be exchanged in restaurants, but it is a little more expensive than bank exchange.
Step 9 make a phone call
Red and pink phones: suitable for domestic calls in Japan, only ten yen coins (ten dollars and three cents) are accepted. Green and gold telephones: You can make international calls and accept calling cards or coins of 10 or 100 yen. Of course, it's best to buy an IP phone card.
10, items must be prepared.
There are few toothbrushes and toothpaste in Japanese hotel rooms, so it is best to bring your own slippers. It is difficult to eat on time during the trip. Because the local living index in Japan is relatively high, it is best to bring some snacks so that you can have something to eat when you are hungry. If you go in spring, you'd better bring a mask. If it snows in winter, you should also bring sunglasses and a hat. Do not wear high heels. There are many hot springs in Japan, so you'd better bring your own supplies.
3. What do you need to bring when traveling to Japan?
Notes on traveling to Japan 1. According to the customs regulations, the maximum amount to be taken out of the country is RMB 6,000 and USD 5,000.
Please go through the customs formalities for high-end items such as cameras. 2. Please carry a durable and light suitcase when traveling, and make identification marks.
Personal documents, passports, coins, jewels and other valuables should be carried with you or stored in the free safe in the hotel room. Don't store it in hotel rooms, suitcases or cars, and don't give it to others for safekeeping.
Please bring enough film (overseas film is relatively expensive) and put it in your carry-on bag for security check and ready access. Please take personal essential medicines and standing medicines with you during your trip.
Cars in Japan and China drive in opposite directions, while cars in China drive on the right and cars in Japan drive on the left. Traffic regulations require vehicles to pass the intersection quickly at the green light, and pedestrians should strictly obey the traffic signals when crossing the road.
Verb (abbreviation of verb) hotel precautions (1) Please be sure to bring your hotel room card or hotel guide when you go out from the hotel in case you get lost. Chinese characters commonly used by Japanese, if the other party doesn't understand, you can write Chinese characters for communication.
(2) Tap water in Japan can be directly drunk, and cold water in hotel bathrooms can be used as drinking water. If you are not used to drinking raw water, there is usually an electric kettle and a small amount of tea in the room, so you can boil your own water.
(3) The TV channel (the red button of the remote control) in Japanese hotel rooms is a pay channel, and the viewing fee is paid by myself. There are no Chinese TV programs in Japanese hotels.
(4) In some Japanese hotel rooms, once the drinks in the refrigerator are taken out, even if they are put back, they will be charged automatically by the computer. Please pay attention. (5) Japanese hotels generally provide toothbrushes, toothpaste, toiletries and slippers, but it is recommended to bring your own.
(6) Hotels generally have 1 10V-220V transformer sockets. The electric plug in Japan is a 2-hole flat plug (generally a round hole plug in China). When carrying cameras and other electrical appliances, please pay attention to bring appropriate plugs.
6. How to use the telephone: Due to Japan's unique wireless communication system, China's GSM cannot be used in Japan. At this time, you can only contact with local coins or magnetic cards.
Pay attention to the following telephone usage. 1, Japanese gray phones can use 100 yen coins, and orange IC phones can make international calls directly with IC cards.
Green phones can only use coins and calling cards to dial local cities (for example, if you use IP calling cards purchased in China, you can use IP calling cards to make long-distance calls after dialing the local IP phone access number according to the instructions, but you need to insert coins or magnetic cards to connect the local phone access number before dialing). 2. Please dial the number in the following order after inserting the coin or card: 00 10 (telecom service number) 86 (China number)10 (Beijing number) 12345678 (landline phone number) 001.
(Tokyo is faster than Beijing time 1 hour, such as 09:00 Tokyo time and 08:00 Beijing time).
4. What should I prepare to live in Japan?
It depends on how long you stay.
If you are traveling for a short time, be prepared to change clothes, some common medicines to prevent you from getting sick in the past, and I don't know how to buy Japanese medicines, some portable kimchi or instant noodles that suit your taste, and avoid eating things that you didn't like in the past, especially when you want to eat instant noodles. Simple commonly used Japanese manuals, you should have a certain knowledge of Japanese, at least know the way if you get lost, or it is better for someone to take you with you all the time, the contact information of Japanese contacts. If you decide on a good place to live in advance, of course, you need to change some Japanese yen in cash, bring your ID card, passport, air ticket and other things you need, such as a camera and books you want to read. If you want to take things to China, you should bring an empty suitcase so that you can take things back. Short-term travel is generally to stay in a hotel, so you don't have to worry about three meals, washing and living, just spend money.
If you are studying abroad for a long time, in addition to the above things, you should also contact the place where you live or study, what to eat and all kinds of daily necessities, and the requirements for Japanese are even higher, because there will be no tour guide or anyone to take care of it, and everything must be solved by yourself. As for what knowledge you want to know, you don't have to mind traveling. Anyway, you are a passerby, and people will forgive you. You will come back in a few days. If you stay for a long time, you won't learn Japanese. All Japanese have to understand etiquette, and you will definitely learn Japanese in class.
5. What is the common sense of traveling to Japan?
1 Bring a comb and toothbrush (basically all hotels don't have combs, and a few hotels don't provide toothbrushes).
Bring something you like and eat well. I just finished my trip to Japan. I'm really not used to the food there.
When soaking in hot springs, it is best not to take a towel to the hot springs, let alone wrap a towel around your body to soak in hot springs or soak in hot springs. You can only put them aside or wrap them around your head at most.
The Japanese service is very good, and the service staff will basically bow their heads and ask questions when they see you, so we should also show a friendly attitude.
Not knowing Japanese is very troublesome. If you know English, you can try to use it, but Japanese and English are generally not good.
Try to keep your passport with you at all times and keep it safe. When you show your passport when shopping, you can enjoy the tax refund service (that is, it is cheaper to buy things), and the loss of your passport can also ensure your personal safety in Japan.
Shops in Japan close surprisingly early. There are basically no shops open on the road around 7: 00 or 8: 00 pm (Japanese time is one hour faster than China, so when you go, you set your watch forward one hour).
Mobile phones are useless unless they are enabled globally. You can buy calling cards locally in Japan.
Take an umbrella and sunscreen. The sun in Japan is very strong.
Be prepared for a small earthquake.
That's all for now!
6. What "little knowledge" do you need to travel to Japan?
If you are traveling in Japan, you don't need to bring too many clothes this season, but you must bring an umbrella. If you are a lady, you can bow 30 degrees. If it's a man, cross your hands in front of your stomach and press your left hand on your right hand ~ ~ If it's a man, bend over 45 degrees and put your hands on the trouser line of your legs ~ ~ When you take off your shoes anywhere, turn around and put them away, with your toes facing outward and your toes facing inward, if there is a shoe cabinet in the restaurant.
Say "こんにちは" when greeting people, but if people who meet for the first time every day say "ぉはよぅござぃます" Say "ぉぃしぃです ~ ~ You can't say" ぁりがとぅす "when someone helps you with food or drinks.
I thought of these for the time being ~ ~
7. What should I pay attention to when traveling to Japan?
Going abroad for the first time? The most difficult visa in Asia is Japan.
The group tour on the 6th should be some routine trips from Osaka to East or from East to Osaka, right? There is nothing special to pay attention to, just take care of your wallet. Just don't shop around! The only best place to shop in Japan is Akihabara Electric Street, which is inexpensive.
Attention should be paid to shopping in Japan: (1) Commodity tax: shopping in Japan cannot be paid directly in RMB or US dollars. Please change US dollars and other foreign currencies into Japanese yen at the hotel or bank. In Japan, except duty-free shops, all purchases are subject to 5% consumption tax. However, in some big shopping malls, when the shopping amount exceeds 654.38+0000 yen, the consumption tax can be refunded on the spot with your passport. It was not handled at that time, and it was impossible to reissue it later.
(Whether to grant the tax refund needs to be confirmed with the mall). (2) Bargaining: Generally, it is impossible to bargain in Japan, especially in department stores. If you insist on bargaining, you may get a cold shoulder.
But you don't have to tip. (3) Suitable products: The quality of small household appliances in Japanese duty-free shops is very good and the price is cheap.
But pay attention to the voltage and system. (the voltage in Japan is 1 10V, the voltage in China is 220V, and the TV image display mode is NISS in Japan and PAL in China). Take some home as gifts for relatives and friends, which is generous and affordable.
It is not cost-effective to buy small boutique toys, clothes and shoes. Most of them are made in China, and they are surprisingly expensive. In addition, Japan's film and camera lithium battery are also more expensive than domestic ones, so you can take more abroad.
Most department stores and shops in Japan close around 7 pm (only a few are open until 9 pm), so it is almost impossible to go shopping at night. Common sense of staying in a Japanese hotel (1) Description: A tatami room in a Japanese hotel is usually a room for four people, with a living room during the day and a bedroom at night.
The hotel staff prepared special bedding. Japanese-style hotels are equipped with slippers and bathrobes. Guests can change into bathrobes immediately after check-in and go anywhere in the hotel.
Bathrobe is worn on the left and on the right. (2) Drinking water: The tap water in Japan can be directly drunk, which is absolutely safe.
You can drink it directly if you are thirsty. (3) Hotel: Japanese hotels generally have toothpaste, toothbrush, shampoo, shower gel, slippers, etc. Japanese hotels don't need to tip in principle.
Voltage The voltage in Japan is almost 1 10V (mainly two-pin flat plugs), so battery chargers such as cameras and video recorders cannot be used unless they are compatible with110-240V. Many hotels can use 1 10 and 220 volts for voltage equipment, so that passengers can use electric shavers, hair dryers and other electrical appliances at will.
8. What common sense should I pay attention to when going to Japan?
Unusual common sense in Japan:
Tap water is cleaner than mineral water (not to mention that even minerals are gone after disinfection), and the food safety problem has been silent since the second half of the 1980s. Some people just want to make trouble at the beginning of the 20th century, so they are relieved to eat it raw.
If you want to smoke, you can only smoke in the smoking room. Public toilets in Tokyo have fire detectors, and most public places have smoking rooms (the recent anti-smoking campaign led to smoking in restaurants or sports facilities).
You need to wear slippers when you enter the room. Don't leave mud outside at home.
Green tea and wheat tea are basically sugar-free, and supermarkets will not sell tea with sugar.
Rice is the life of the Japanese. In Japan, whether it is Chinese food or western food, you can order rice in the restaurant, even if you already have another staple food: Lamian Noodles or bread.
9. What are the requirements for working in Japan?
Ordinary labor services in Japan have very low requirements for academic qualifications, and they can graduate from junior high school or above.
But for male workers, if they don't have any skills: welding, machine tools, construction and so on. There will be fewer opportunities to go to Japan.
Your age is just what most Japanese factories need, and some Japanese companies don't need technology to recruit people. Such as aquatic products, printing, agriculture and so on.
If it costs, it is generally around 35,000-40,000 yuan. First, you have to sign up for an interview with a Japanese company. It usually takes about half a year to go abroad after admission (during which you need to train Japanese). According to the current yen exchange rate, it is generally about 10 thousand RMB a month.
A well-paid job is a job with a lot of overtime, and overtime pay is paid. Note: Be prepared for hardship when going abroad.
- Related articles
- What are the best tourist attractions on May Day?
- Where is Sheraton Jiaozhou Hotel in Greentown?
- Bose Hengsheng Hotel Environment
- What road is Lanting Garden in Xinxiang?
- What brand is the quilt of Hilton Hotel?
- Is Giant Power Grid a State-owned Enterprise?
- Changsha kexin hotel
- The laudatory name of a bird
- What is the definition of "Astor" tourism?
- Notice on the launch of nucleic acid testing for all employees in Wenzhou Taishun in 2022 (Taishun nucleic acid testing time)