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When I am paying for my goods at a supermarket or konbini, the cashier always asks me that question. On dictionaries, the meaning of 宜しい is "fine / good" and it made me confused, "What is good about the point card?"

Then I assumed that they actually asked me if I have a point card. I knew that I can just say はい and show the cashier my point card if I have one. Well, I do not own one so I usually respond 「カードがない 。」 but the cashier often seems confused after hearing my answer.

mawgumelar
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2 Answers2

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Japanese よい/いい/よろしい sometimes means "... is not necessary" or "fine without ..."

  • コーヒーはいいです。 (Thank you but) I don't want coffee.
  • いや、いいです。 No thanks. / I don't need it. (e.g., to a salesperson)
  • その話はもういい。 That's enough!
  • 言い訳はよろしい。 Don't make excuses.

Therefore, "ポイントカードよろしいですか?" means something like "You don't want to use a point card, right?" or "Are you okay without a point card?" I believe the cashier said は, not が. ポイントカードよろしいですか would mean "Do you rather prefer a point card (over something else)?"

When you respond to it, はい or いいです means "I'm fine without it" or "I won't use one". (If はい worked in your case, I think the cashier guessed your intention from your gesture rather than your words.) If you want to use a point card, you can say いや, あります or 使います.

カードない is indeed very confusing because it sounds like "My card is missing!", i.e., you want to use a point card but just noticed you have lost it. Read this question for the reason. カードない at least works, although blunt.

naruto
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  • Ahh I see.. I have made silly mistakes then, lol. About は or が thing, I am not sure. But I think you are right: the cashier says は. Thanks for the amazing answer! – mawgumelar Apr 14 '18 at 11:42
  • How do I respond if I do have a card? 「良くないです」? – Sweeper Apr 15 '18 at 14:27
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    @Sweeper 良くないです/宜しくないです ("I am not fine") actually works, but it sounds a bit accusatory/sarcastic. People usually say 使います or あります, as I said in my answer. – naruto Apr 15 '18 at 15:07
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I agree with naruto. You can just say はい, いいです or 結構です. All of these mean "I don't need that."

Well, I do not own one so I usually respond 「カードがない 。」 but the cashier often seems confused after hearing my answer.

I guess that's because カードがない is ambiguous and I imagine the cashier thought "did he lose his card? Or he left it in his home? Or he simply doesn't own one?" A cashier is a routine work so it's no wonder they are used to はい, いいです, 結構です but カードがない. You are not wrong.

dixhom
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