落葉 /o chi ba/ means 'fallen leaves, dispersed leaves'.
散る落葉 /chi ru o chi ba/ means 'falling leaves'.
Plural and singular form in words does not make any difference in a word's grammatical inflection in Japanese.
First Leaf Fallen was created in 2004-07.
Singular = leaf Plural = leaves
the singular possessive for the word leaf is leaf apostrophe s
leaf's
leaf scar
An Autumn leaf falling off a tree has been rejected from the tree and is now no longer alive. The tree is settling down to sleeping during winter and will awake once spring weather warms up.
The Japanese word for 'leaf' is 'ha'. =D Hope you got an answer!
葉 (ha) is Japanese for leaf. Leaves of tree for instance would be 木の葉 (ko no ha).
I'm falling for you!! heheheh
Air resistance decreases acceleration of falling objects
"Leaf" is singular - one leaf. "Leaves" is plural - more than one leaf.
yes