"Ginkou" is a Japanese word and in English it means "Bank"
The Japanese work for Ginkgo, 銀行 (Ginko) Also means 'Bank'
You may say '[ginkou no] kouzabangou,' written in Japanese as: [銀行の]口座番号
一番近い銀行はどこですか? (Ichiban chikai ginkou wa doko desu ka?)
'I work in a bank' is銀行で勤めています (ginkou de tsutomete imasu) in Japanese. This is pronounced roughly as:銀行で (ginkou de) - geen-koh deh勤めています(tsutomete imasu) - tsoo-toe-meh-tay-mas(uh)The final 'u' sound of勤めています is kind of muttered. You may simply leave it out altogether if you want.
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
Mean is the average.
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
What does GRI mean? What does GRI mean?
The correct usage is "what DOES it mean"
The haudensaunee mean irguios
This is quite a hard question because Japanese doesn't have just one word for 'and' - it has many.- The particle と (to) can be used to mean 'and' when listing things. と is used for complete lists.- The particle や (ya) is used to for incomplete lists. It's useful to think of lists using や as starting with 'things such as...' or ending with 'etc'.- The て form (te-form)of a verb can be used to connect sentences with the word 'and'.- Adjectives can be connected with either~くて(~kute)or ~で (~de) depending on whether the adjective is a i-adjective (くて) or na-adjective (で).Examples:と (to):スペイン語とイタリア語とポルトガル語が話せる (supeingo to itariago to porutogarugo ga hanaseru)- "I can speak Spanish, Italian and Portuguese (only/nothing else)."や(ya): スパゲッティやバーガーが好きです(supagetti ya baagaa ga suki desu)- "I like spaghetti and burgers (among other things)."て(te): きのう銀行に行って、銀行の近くにある喫茶店で食べた (kinou ginkou ni itte, ginkou no chikaku ni aru kissaten de tabeta) - "Yesterday I went to the bank and (then) ate at a nearby café."Adj. - くて(kute) & で(de):このケーキがふんわり柔らかくて、完璧で、おいしい(kono keeki ga funwari yawarakakute, kanpeki de, oishii)- "This cake is fluffy, perfect and delicious."
No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.