Japanese people don't really say "I'll see you" so the closest translation I can think of is:
"Doyoubi ni au." which is "We'll meet on Saturday."in Japanese.
see you on Saturday
I'm guessing you meant " see you on Saturday" See you --> Je te verrais on Saturday--> Samedi " Je te verrai samedi. "
I'm going to see Enrique Iglesias at the LG Arena this saturday. I'm really upset cuz ppl say its not very good. But ill tell you after i go.
Saturday is an abstract noun; you can't see, hear, taste, smell, or touch a Saturday.
journey is synonymous with adventure and adventure in nihonggo is "Bouken" so journey = bouken
u say ???
Saturday's child works hard for his living. See the related link below.
samedi dernier see Google Translate
Delirious hallucination
because they see your face
"Te verá"
It is because I see thy lips speak words