"ohisashiburi desu" means "It's been a while" or "Long time no see". In this form it is fairly polite. A more casual way to say it is "hisashiburi".
its been a long time, right
it means is/are it is a conjugate for des or desu.
Desu or Des is the Japanese verb 'to be'
i think you mean genki desuka which is how are you
Japanese fighting fish are called 'des combattants' or 'des poissons combattants' in French.
watasiwa roku des
"comme des garçons" mean "like boys". It is the title of a well-known French song of the sixties, and the brand name of a clothing retailer. In the latter sense, one could say: "tu viens, on va à 'Comme Des garçons' " (come on, we're going to Comme Des Garçons'
Des clés mean keys
Emilia Delcheva-Chalandon has written: 'Des pierres et des fleurs' -- subject(s): Philosophy, Japanese Arts, Japanese Aesthetics
Konnichiwa. O Genki des ka?
onamye wa nan des ka
''des craies'' would be ''crays''.
"shi no numa" (死の沼) is Japanese and translates as "swamp of death". Swamp of death in German is "Todessumpf" or "Sumpf des Todes"