if you mean shooting star its nagare boshi
'Hoshi.'
hikaru
秋 /a ki/ means 'autumn, fall'.
I'm not sure what you mean by '3 star', I'll take it as a name (of a place etc). It would be 'Surii sutaa e youkoso'.
流れ星 (Nagareboshi)
If you mean "_________ is Japanese," you would say, _______ es Japonés.
"You are a" would be "anata wa" in Japanese.
If you are saying "I am happy," you would use ureshii, or if you are saying happiness, you would say "shiawase"
In Japanese, words usually have two readings. One, that's spoken when the word is by itself and one when it's in a compoun-word. The singular reading for star is Hoshi or -boshi. And Jade (or jewel) is Tama. So if you want to say the star is Jade, you could say "Tamai Hoshi" (the "I" implies it is an adjective) but if it's the name of the star, it might be called it's compound reading, "Tamasei" kinda like how Mars is called the fire star in Japanese: "Kasei". This is based on my current understanding of Japanese and is not 100% accurate, I'm sure. But I hope it helped some.Answer:ç¿¡ç¿ ã®æ˜Ÿ /hi su i no ho shi/ would be 'jade star' in Japanese, If jade is referring to color it would be ç¿¡ç¿ è‰²ã®æ˜Ÿ /hi su i i ro no ho shi/.
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 ____.
冬-fuyu-winter 春-haru-spring 秋-aki-fall
No. The stars are far beyond any noticeable effects of Earth's gravity. The stars are also far larger and more massive than Earth is, so if Earth were ever to run into one it would be more accurate to say that Earth would fall into the star.