It means 'please'.
For example:
Shizuka ni shite kudasai = please be quiet.
Sore wo motte kudasai = please pass me that thing.
Usually added after a verb in 'te' form.
please open your book
kudasai = "Please (give me)"
"This, please"
if you don't understand a word in a sentence, or even a whole sentence what does "hon" mean in English? - eigo de, "hon" WA nan desu ka? you could say i don't understand, wakarimasen, or ask for it to be repeated, mo ichi do kudasai
'Hon wo toridashite kudasai.' (本を取り出してください) Meaning (Go get your book, fetch your book.).
"Book" is 'hon' in Japanese.
If you mean a Japanese book (as in a book from Japan) you would say "nihon no hon" にほんのほん 日本の本 If you mean a book in Japanese (written in Japanese) than it is "nihon go no hon" にほんごのほん 日本語の本 I know that sounds stupid, but you need to specific. One could technically buy a book in all Japanese that did not come from Japan.
Japanese in sense of the language: 日本語 /ni hon go/. Japanese in sense of person(s) from Japan: 日本人 /ni hon jin/. Japanese in sense of the nationality: 日本国籍 /ni hon ko ku se ki/.
hon in romaji and 本 ( I don't know the Japanese writing for sure, I got 本 of a translator site, but I'm sure about hon ).
i think it's 'hon'
Hon.
saisho no hon
They are: 日本
The particle '-no' in Japanese is used to show possession or describe a relationship between two nouns. It can indicate that the noun before it possesses the quality or characteristic of the noun after it.
日本語で =in JapAnese. ni hon go de