I think you mean "Anata wa dare desu ka." (since the Japanese sentence order is SOV, or subect object verb, unlike our SVO)
Anata means you in Japanese, but it is a bit impolite, so people often say o- instead.
Wa is a particle that indicates the subject of a sentence, meaning 'you' is the subject of this sentence.
Dare means who.
Desu is a particle that you can think of meaning is.
Ka is another particle indicating a question. It's basically a question mark as a word, so you don't need a question mark after sentences ending in 'ka'.
Therefore, anata wa dare desu ka (あなたは誰ですか。) means "Who are you?"
It means something along the lines of "Who do you hate?" as this is a question, and 'Dare' means 'who' and 'Kirai' means 'Hate' or 'Disike'
Ignoring its mistakes (both 'no's should be replaced by 'ni') it means:
'Who are you saying that to? Are you talking to yourself?'
Whose is it (in english)
simply, Desu. eg. who are you? - anata wa dare desu ka? where are you? - anata wa doko desu ka? are you ill? - anata wa byouki desu ka? are they new? - arera wa atarashii desu ka? ect. Desu means: Are, Is, and am.
"Who is very cute?"
It is [誰ですか?] in romaji is Dare Desu ka?
who's this? = これは誰ですか? (Kore wa dare desu ka?)
genki desu ka or ikaga desu ka
Dare ka -who ? Dare ka kimi - Who are you? (polite) Dare ka anata - Who are you? (for a stranger) Dare ka omai - Who are you? (to someone below you) Dare ka anta - Who are you? (rude) Dare ka teemee - Who are you? (vulgar)
この人は誰ですか? Kono hito wa dare desu ka?
where are the...= wa doko desu ka ( the u in desu is silent) e.G TOIRE WA DOKO DESU KA - where are the toilets.
The best comeback for any 4chan atagonist. Example: This thread is DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU DESU
"souka?" or "sou desu ka?" and also "hontou desu ka?"
"Ogenki desu ka?" is "are you well?" in Japanese.
The phrase 'gomen nasai, wakarimasen' means "I'm sorry, I don't understand." 'Dou desu ka' means "How is it/how about it".