教える /o shi e ru/ means 'to teach' in Japanese. 'Teach' as the imperative form for it would be 教えてください /o shi e te ku da sai/.
As in 'the teachings of Christianity': 教えること (oshieru koto)
As in 'I am teaching a class' 教えてる (oshiete ru)
As in 'I am teaching a class next year' 教える 'oshieru'
You can say "Thank you for teaching me" or "I appreciate your teaching."
Noriko Asato has written: 'Teaching mikadoism' -- subject(s): Education and state, Emperor worship, History, Japanese, Japanese language, Study and teaching
how to say "editor" in japanese
To say old Japanese illustrations in Japanese, you say "Mukashi no Nihon no irasuto".
we say Nakagawa if we want to say inside in Japanese.
フライドポテト is how you say it in japanese'
メロン is how you say melon in Japanese.
To say tennis in Japanese.........テニス
Terekineshisu is the word for telekinesis in the Japanese language.
"Does teaching is an art?" is not a question. You could say "Is teaching an art?" but the answer to that is debatable.
To say blue fish in Japanese you say ブルーフィッシュ.
This is no word for a or the in Japanese.