Yes, the latin, (English), letters were typed in and cypher text came out of the enciphering machine and vice versa when a message was received.
The English speaking country on the edge of Japanese held territory and expansion during World War 2 was Australia. The US state of Hawaii was also near the edge of Japanese held territory in the Pacific Ocean.
Yes
sending messages
In World War I, the Japanese joined the Allies for a time, and fought the German army in east Asia.
the Japanese . the Japanese invaded china in 1937
yes it is. English is one the hardest language to learn in the world. it has the longest alphabet in the world meaning it has the most words. (crossed out the part that is not true.)
I do not believe there is a letter "world" in the english alphabet
People not machines
No there are no missing letters from the Latin Alphabet for English. There are also no letters missing from the Greek Alphabet. Both alphabets are in tact.
There is no known pioneer of the English alphabet. Early monks adapted the Latin alphabet for use in English, but no one knows any of their names.
The letter in the Phonecian alphabet were the base upon which the Greek alphabet was built. From the greek alphabet, the roman alphabet was formed. The ancient roman alphabet are the letters used in Latin, and all of the Romance languages (English, Frensh, Spanish, Italian, ect.) '
The world sickle is 'kama' in Japanese, written: 鎌
"Pearl" is 'shinju.'
It is 5 seconds on a typewriter. On a flat keyboard, it might take longer.
because china is their own country, its much like why doesnt spanish have the same alphabet as english? engligh is not the only language in the world.
The word 'schoolgirl' translated into Japanese is 'joshigakusei' (女子学生)
exile - last Christmas a whole new world Japanese version