The only consonant in Japanese is 'n'. The rest are always accompanied by vowels (a,i,u,e,o)
In the case of 'R', in hiragana (used for writing originally Japanese words) and in katakana (used for borrowed words and foreign names,etc) we have these:
Hiragana : ら (ra) , り (ri) , る (ru) , れ (re) , ろ (ro)
Katakana : ラ (ra) , リ (ri) , ル (ru) , レ (re) , ロ (ro)
Japanese peoples houses look like houses.
No, there is not. The Japanese R-like consonant is a cross between an R and an L.
The Plural for Japanese is "Japanese". It;s like sheep. Look at the sheep. Same with Japanese. Look at all of the Japanese coming off the plane
In Japanese katakana, Belma would look like: ベールマ (beruma).
The Japanese language has no l sound.
It looks like this-日本
ダル pronounced day-ru (a Japanese r is like an r and an l mixed together)
It can be written in Japanese as: ケートリン
In Japanese there is no 'r'. Just 'l'. Ex: America is said A-meh-li-ca, but you sort of make an r sound, but it's closer to l. Some other Japanese letters are like that too.
旅
メガン
There is no specific way to write that name in japanese since the Japanese do not have l's in their language. When you hear a Japanese speak they normally convert their L's into R's. you would have to convert the L's which would make it roughly look like this: シエリイshierii (pron: she-eh-ree) hoped this helped^^