suru koto ga nai nara koko ni inaide
There nothing here i dont know
Here is one: USA 右左, meaning Right-Left.
Here's a site for baby names, this is the A-Z of Japanese names. It also shows the meaning which I think will by useful to you. babynameguide.com/categoryjapanese.asp?strGender=&strAlpha=A&strCat=Japanese&strOrder=Meaning
Type your answer here... Nothing. A war over territory like the Russo-Japanese War never brings peace, it just disrupts it.
ikara is used in the context: "insert object here" WA ikara desu ka meaning, How much does "insert object here cost?
'I'm studying Japanese.' 'Korekara' has the meaning of "after this," "from here on," "now," etc.
koko moko shipo has no meaning as a sentence. koko (ここ) = "here" moko is not a japanese word. shippō (七宝) = "seven treasures"
the meaning of the name "trisha" is an awesome buddy of heather!!! {{Heather && Trisha Wer here!}}
Please = kudasaiPlease do it = (word goes here) +kudasaimasuPlease don't do it = (word goes here) +kudasaimasenexamplePlease eat the meal = gohan o tabete kudasaimasu
There is a lot of Japanese cheers in a Japanese concert. The audience does these while having glow sticks in their hand(s). Here are some examples:Hai!=ハイ!(A common Japanese concert cheer, literally meaning "yes". A variation of this was heard in the video game "TheIdolm@ster" In this case, it's "ha-i!")FuFu=夫婦!Fuwa=不破!(Also an onomatopoeia in Japanese. Here's the onomatopoeia Fuwa: ふわふわ!(Meaning "fluffy"))Fu-!=フー-!Yeah-! (There may be other variations of this.)=ええ-!
hi im not going to give you the answer cause i dont have to and you should not look for answers here cause i just said nothing about that
It means 'paper folding', from 'ori' - 'folding', and 'kami' - 'paper'. (kami becomes gami here, some words in Japanese change like this when formed into a compound word)