If it's written in Japanese and you know how to read Japanese then you just read it while pronouncing place names as they are. If you don't know how to read it you just ask for a 'Roumaji' (Pronunciation of the Japanese words written in English - Like 'watashi' which means 'I' in Japanese) or you ask someone who can read Japanese to help you.
Yomeru?
Japanese schoolchildren begin to learn English in seventh grade. Almost every Japanese person can read the English alphabet because many brand names and song titles in Japan contain English or English lettering. Many Japanese also have a limited grasp of English from their school years, though that depends on how good of a student they were and whether or not their occupation requires them to understand English.
マッフィン, read as "maffin." muffin in Japanese is:マフィン P
Helen Bagley has written: 'Sand in my shoe' -- subject(s): Biography 'Read & speak Japanese for beginners' -- subject(s): Japanese language, Spoken Japanese, Self-instruction, English, Textbooks for foreign speakers, Sound recordings for English speakers 'Read and Speak Japanese (Read & Speak)'
Many Japanese are bilingual and can both read and speak English .
Yomi is the word "read" as in, to read a book. The infinitive verb is yomimasu.
Unfortunately, no. The Japanese games would have to be manually programmed to support English, and very very few are. The Pokemon games, for example, do not have English translations in them.
Geoffrey Bownas has written: 'The Penguin book of Japanese verse' -- subject(s): English poetry, Japanese poetry, Translations from Japanese, Translations into English 'The Asian phoenix' -- subject(s): Addresses, essays, lectures 'Japanese Journeys' 'Japanese rainmaking, and other folk practices' 'From Japanology to Japanese studies' -- subject(s): Japan, Study and teaching
to say physic in Japanese is 下剤 and it is read like gezai hope this helps :)
I'm not sure about Japanese, but you can try English or Chinese. Just go on youtube and look for it.
The name Gerard is written as ジェラード in Japanese. This is read as 'jeraado'.
I read somewhere that it was ranked: 1) English 2) Japanese 3) Russian