kanji yomeru no = Can [you] read kanji?'
It should be Anata wa kanji o yomu koto ga dekimasu? (あなたは漢字を読むことができます?)
"Yumeru" means "to dream."
Kanji characters. Kanji characters are logographic characters that represent whole words or ideas in the Japanese writing system.
The three Japanese alphabets are Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Hiragana is used for native Japanese words and grammatical particles, Katakana is used for borrowed words and onomatopoeia, and Kanji consists of Chinese characters used for nouns, verbs, and adjectives in the Japanese language.
As there are basically no plurals in Japanese, the words 'tears' and 'tear' are the same. Therefore, the kanji are the same. The kanji for 'tear' is 涙 (namida).
Kanji is a Japanese word that can be used in multiple contexts. It can refer to emotions or authority figures. Kanji is technically Chinese words which are also used in Japan.
The three main writing styles of Japanese are kanji, hiragana, and katakana. Kanji are characters borrowed from Chinese language and represent whole words or concepts, while hiragana and katakana are syllabaries used for grammatical functions, native Japanese words, and foreign loanwords, respectively.
An ateji is a use of kanji chosen for their phonetic or semantic value to represent foreign or native Japanese words, or the kanji so used.
Kana is a name for the phonetic symbols in Japanese, while Kanji is like words. Without Kana, you won't be able to read a thing, while without Kanji, you can actually read some parts of a text.
There is no such thing as a Japanese Alphabet. The Japanese use 3 different systems of writing, but none of them are alphabetic. Kanji, or Chinese characters, are used for most verbs and words. Hiragana, a simplified and flowing script, is used for verbal conjugation or when you don't remember the Kanji for a certain word. Katakana, a simplified and angular script, is used for words borrowed from other languages.
Japanese kanji and Chinese characters are very much the same. Japanese has 3 alphabets- hiragana (which is used for everyday writing), katakana (used for English words like "terebi" which is television), and kanji which is used instead of hiragana for nouns and adjectives etc. However, Chinese only have kanji, although they call it something else. The reason they are so alike is because the Japanese borrowed that alphabet off the Chinese, so a lot of Chinese characters will have the same meaning as Japanese kanji, although they will be pronounced differently.
Japanese uses three, katakana - to write foreign words and things like sound effects in manga hiragana kanji - Chinese characters I think the most common is kanji and hiragana
Google Translate has "Show Romanization" option
Hiragana is a fundamental component of the Japanese writing system and is used for native Japanese words, verb endings, particles, and sometimes for writing words that do not have a kanji equivalent. It is considered one of the basic scripts alongside katakana and kanji.