に (ni) is a particle in Japanese used for the target of a verb. For example, 図書館に行く (toshokan ni iku) means "go to library", or 犬は部屋にいる (inu ha heya ni iru) "The dog is in the room".
二(ni) is also the Japanese word for two.
"Ni" can have various meanings in Japanese depending on the context. It can indicate direction towards a location, a specific time or date, a recipient of an action, or a specific purpose.
'Ni' is "two" in Japanese.
two
In Japanese, the number 2 is spelled as δΊ (ni).
February in Japanese is written as δΊζ and pronounced as "ni-gatsu."
"Ni Hao" means "hello" in Chinese. To respond, you can say "Ni Hao" back.
It is 'ni juu ichi' in Japanese, written either 21, or in Kanji, 二十一
The phrase "anata ni aitai" (γγͺγγ«δΌγγγ) means "I want to see you" in Japanese. It can be written using hiragana and kanji characters as well.
This does not mean anything in Japanese.
"juu ni" is a Japanese word and in English it means "twelve"
"Ni gatsu" is a Japanese word and in English it means "February"
It means "extremely good" in Japanese.
上に on top or above
go. eg. _______ no gakkou ni ikimasu. i go to ________.
This is a mix of both Japanese and Chinese, and as it is, means nothing in Japanese.
Ouse ni, could mean at/in place of meeting/date, at/in rendezvous.
Typically, you may attach '-ni tsuite' to a noun to mean 'about.'
Yujin ni, or 友人にmeans: To/for a friend. 友人=friend に=to/ for(contextually)
ダニエル /da ni e ru/ is Japanization of that name.
no. It is Ni Jyu Roku. Because Ni ROKU would mean 2 and 6 alone. It wouldn't mean 26. Jyu is like the particle for saying tens, ie. San Jyu would mean 30.