The most commonly used term would be 終わり (owari) which is the masu stem for the verb 終わる (owaru) that means "to end/finish". Occasionally you might see つづく (tsuzuku) at the end of something, but this term actually means "to be continued".
You may say 'owari no hajimari,' written: 終わりの始まり
The beginning of the end is hard to say what it is, but if you really want to know, the beginning of the end is just that the start of the end. from carl25 NO! The beginning of THE END is the letter "T"
I'm only in beginning Japanese but I believe one way to say it is 'Shitteimasu'
That's beginning, not end isn't it?
You say your thought, then end it with "to omou."
The way that you would say no one can understand me in Japanese is ________________. If you wanted to add the words but you to the end of no one can understand me, you would say _______.
"hime" or "himemiya" is what you say for princess in Japanese.
Ofisu So literally pronounced: office with a su at the end.
asobukoto (mid sentence) / asobiteru (end of the sentence)
No. A geometric line has no beginning or end. A ray has a beginning, but no end. A line segment has both a beginning and an end.
"Welcome" in Japanese
Nobody remade it for The Watchmen, it's another song by Smashing Pumpkins. They have "The Beginning Is The End Is The Beginning" and "The End Is The Beginning Is The End." The song played in The Watchmen trailer was "The Beginning Is The End Is The Beginning."
fan is fan in Japanese so as this sentence is incomplete I'll add "Thanks" at the beginning Thanks for being a fan = fan ni natte, arigato