'Science teacher' may beç†ç§‘ã®å…ˆç”Ÿ (rika no sensei) in Japanese.
"My science teacher," would be, "Mi profesor de ciencias."
Music teacher in Japanese is ongaku no sensei, 音楽の先生, which, literally translated, means teacher of music.
Salut, prof de science.
Chemistry in Japanese is written as "化学" and pronounced as "kagaku."
You may say 'ii sensei desu,' written in Japanese: いい先生です
The traditional Japanese teacher strives to be "strict but kind".
It is 'rigaku' in Japanese. (Japanese: 理学)
toad-ally!
you have o be educated and have to know about science to become a science teacher you have o be educated and have to know about science to become a science teacher
科学施設 Kagaku shisetsu
In Spanish, "teacher" is maestro/maestra. In French, it is professeur/professeure. In German, it is Lehrer/Lehrerin. In Japanese, it is sensei (先生).
In Japanese it means 'One who has gone before.' Most people simply say it means teacher.