How to say "sleeping pills" in Japanese?

In Japanese "sleeping pills" translates to  眠り薬 

Transliteration: nemuriyaku

🇯🇵 眠れないときは、眠り薬を飲むことがあります。

🗣️ nemurenai toki wa, nemuriyaku wo nomu koto ga arimasu.

🇺🇸 I sometimes take sleeping pills when I can't sleep.



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🇯🇵

Japanese

Native speakers
128M 🗣️
Official language in
Japan 🌍
Active vocabulary
10k-20k 📚
Difficulty
difficult 🤔
Closest langauges
None among major
⏳ Avg. time to basics
1100-1300 hours ⏳

Why learn Japanese?

Learning Japanese offers significant advantages in sectors like technology, automotive, and finance, as Japan is the world's third-largest economy. It also provides a gateway to understanding a rich, millennia-old culture. English speakers typically need to know around 2,000 Kanji characters and additional Kana for basic literacy. Achieving general proficiency often requires 1,300-2,200 hours of study, partly due to three writing systems: Kanji, Hiragana, and Katakana. Key grammatical concepts include particles like 'wa' and 'ga' to mark subject and topic, and verb forms that express tense and politeness level. Mastery allows for nuanced communication and deeper cultural understanding, both in business and social contexts.



Frequently Asked Questions

How to say "sleeping pills" in Japanese?

You can use the word "眠り薬" which translates to "sleeping pills".

How to pronounce "眠り薬" (sleeping pills) in Japanese?

The word "眠り薬" is pronounced as "nemuriyaku".

Do you have an audio recording on how to pronounce" 眠り薬" (sleeping pills) in Japanese?

Not yet, but this functionality is coming soon. We're focusing on the quality of the written content first.