Tōmorokoshi
Japanese is only the official language in Japan, and on the island of Angaur, which is part of the nation of Palau.
"Busy" is written: 忙しい
Timothy J. Vance has written: 'Instant vocabulary through prefixes and suffixes' -- subject(s): Japanese language, Suffixes and prefixes, Word formation 'Kodanshas Romanized Japanese-English Dictionary (Japanese for Busy People)' 'An introduction to Japanese phonology' -- subject(s): Japanese language, Phonology 'Kodansha's concise romanized Japanese-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, Japanese language 'Nonsense word experiments in phonology and their application to Rendaku in Japanese'
are you busy now
Now Get Busy was created in 2004.
Fortunately for the children of Japan, Japanese is the language of instruction used in Japanese schools.
A Japanese language school teaches Japanese (by definition).
"Japanese" in Japanese is calledNihongoNihon meaning Japan, go meaning language.
japanese language course
Most likely Japanese. Although, many games have the option to change the language to English. Now this might mean that the subtitles will be in English but i doubt that the actual audio speech will be in English.
No, the Japanese language does not have articles like "a," "an," or "the" as seen in English.
In Japanese, when the word no is said, it can be said as ___, ______, or ________. The Japanese language does not use the same alphabet as the English language.