'I want money' isãŠé‡‘欲ã—ã„㪠(okane hoshii na) in Japanese. However, this sentence is very casual. A more polite alternative would beãŠé‡‘ãŒæ¬²ã—ã„ã§ã™ (okane ga hoshii desu).
we say Nakagawa if we want to say inside in Japanese.
To say expect in Japanese when you want the definition to mean leave out or omit, you say ___. If you use except as a preposition to mean without or but, you say ____.
You could say "kimiga hoshiindesu" which means "i want you (in a sexual way.)" Hope that helps :)
Possibly related: 'heya' is Japanese for 'room'If you want to say 'hey' in Japanese, just say 'hey' in English
Congress paid money to the Japanese Americans to say sorry.
お金 The Japanese word for money is okane. The way to say it phonetically is "oh-kah-nay
"To want" is expressed in different ways in Japanese. If you "want to do 'verb,'" ("I want to sing,") then you use the -tai form of verbs. If you "want 'noun,'" then you may use "noun ga hoshii," written: nounが欲しい
If you want to say it, it's tokei, but if you want to write it, it's 時計.
if you want to say dead in Japanese it is 'Shinda' - it comes from the verb 'shi' which means to die.dee-shee
If you want to say it, it's basuketto booru, but if you want to write it, it's バスケットボール
'Kane ga zenzen nai.'
キャデラックコンバーチブル Kyaderakkukonbāchiburu