It's an incomplete sentence and is used like this;
わたしはにほんいすんでいます。
watashi wa nihon ni sunde imasu.
where watashi wa is essentially 'I' and nihon means 'Japan'.
This translates to 'I live in Japan'.
SUNDE means "to live" such as I live in this house. Watashi WA ie ni sunde imasu.
use "ni imasu" examples Tokyo ni imasu, ( I am in Tokyo) nihon ni imasu (I am in Japan)
if you are a girl then you say: watashi to kyo ni sunde imasu if you are a boy then replace watashi with boku
"kazoku ga nannin imasu ka."~ this means "how many people are in your family?"
MEANS: "Now I'm at home, and you? (are where? / what about you?)..." ima - now WA - is (I am) ie - home / house ni - inside (ni is used for other meanings but IE NI is IN HOME) imasu - I am / am (formal) ... anata WA - You Are(?) (Casual Japanese - and how about you can be just "...and you?") Cheers, E-2-J-BLOG
Ofurosato ha dochira deshouka?
'Anata WA tooku ni imasu'.[oo = elongated 'o' sound]
I think you might mean 歌をきれいに歌っています (uta wo kirei ni utatte imasu) which could be used to mean "I'm singing beautifully" in Japanese. The topic (I) would depend almost entirely on context.
'Doko ni imasu' means 'where am i' 「どこにいます」
'There is a man by the car.'
Anata ni koi wo shite imasu 'I'm In love with you'
Google translator states it as "Watashi WA kono shitsumon ni tachiōjō shite imasu"