Yes. It is a Japanese word.
Yes. Japan has had numerous tsunamis. The word "tsunami" is originally Japanese.
Really the word Tsunami is from japan. Its English meaning is "seismic sea waves".
An earthquake caused the tsunami!
Yes, in March 2011 there was a significant tsunami as a result of the magnitude 9.0 earthquake on the ocean floor.The term tsunami itself is a Japanese word and with it Japan has the longest recorded history of tsunamis.
Because it's a Japanese word in in the language Tsu つ or ツ (depending on which form of Japanese your using) is a Japanese character and where the T is silent for instance the word Tsubasa つばさ or ツバサ is pronounced Soo-ba-saa not t sound, that's just the way the Japanese language is
No. Tsunami it's a japanese word.
tsunami is said as tsunami (we took the word from Japanese) It's written 津波
The word "tsunami" comes from Japanese, where "tsu" means harbor and "nami" means wave. This term accurately describes the phenomenon of a series of large ocean waves caused by underwater disturbances.
It remains in English, just as "tsunami" remains in Japanese.
am early Japanese word meaning 'harbour wave'
Yes. Japan has had numerous tsunamis. The word "tsunami" is originally Japanese.
From the Japanese language meaning Harbour Wave
The word is Japanese. It originally meant "harbor wave" because that was where the most damage occurs during a tsunami.
Really the word Tsunami is from japan. Its English meaning is "seismic sea waves".
津波 Tsunami
Tsunami.Although the literal translation for it does means harbor wave, this is the acceptable word for tidal wave as well.
Tsunami comes from Japanese.