There are some Japanese words that phonetically sound the same such as "biiru" which means "beer". However the flip side is that most words like that are is because of their English meanings.
As a side note there are a few names that I heard of while living in Japan that are similar in sound, but not meaning.
Japanese: Erika, Mei
Western: Erica, May
Not sure how much help this is, but I hope I helped a little.
There is no such thing in Japanese.
Say them in English. That is how you say them in Japanese. Since Trick-or-treating is a very Western thing to do. Halloween didn't exist in Japan until Westerners brought it over so "Happy Halloween" is the same in both languages; the only difference in Japanese is it is pronounced slightly differently because not all the sounds in English exist in Japanese
If you're not Japanese, you don't have a Japanese name. Simple as. You can have your English name in Japanese Kanji and/or Katakana, with sites like this; http://japanesetranslator.co.uk/your-name-in-japanese/ You can change your name to fit. e.g. Sophie to Chie as they have the same meaning - Wisdom. But, of course, this is not your actual name in Japanese, just a name with the same meaning. Like lots of languages, the only thing about names over borders are their pronounciation. Like Axel, off Kindom Hearts 2 (Game), his name is prounounced "Akuseru" in Japanese. But it's still the same name. You can get sites, like Rum and Monkey, which change your name into similar looking Japanese names (in Romanji), but, again, this is not your Japanese name.
In English it is diet i am not sure what it is in Japanese but i am trying to find out the same thing
Yes, no means the same thing in both languages.
Kimono is Japanese from 'ki' meaning wear and 'mono' meaning thing
Just give what you want to say in Japanese and i will tell ya!!!! I am Japanese okay! I can translate anything to Japanese to English of English to Japanese!just write me on my message board!!!! Sayounara!!! (goodbye) lol!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Words and phrases, when correctly translated, mean the same thing in all languages.
Languages are not "created", they just evolve from a previous one. French isn't the same thing as Old French, English isn't the same thing as Old English. This plus the fact that there is no birth registry for languages, make it impossible to answer.
There is only one English alphabet, and it cannot be translated into the Japanese alphabet because there is no such thing as a Japanese alphabet. Japanese uses syllabaries and picture-symbols in its writing.
"Flirt" in French translates to "flirter," which means to engage in playful or romantic behavior with someone in a light-hearted manner.
Eranda(mono (if it's a thing))