"I'll leave it to you".
eg. "Douzo yoroshiku" (douzo = take this thing that I give you)
This means "here, take this. I entrust you to take care of this."
Japanese greetings sometimes go like this:
(Speaker A gets introduced to speaker B).
A: Hajimemashite. (Nice to meet you)
B: Hajimemashite. (Nice to meet you, too)
A: Watashi wa atarashii seito de, yoroshiku onegaeshimasu. (I am a new student here, so please take care of me)
B: Hai. (Okay)
Other words I used in the above example:
Watashi wa = I/me
atarashii = new
seito = student
de = (particle word); because
onegaeshimasu = I guess this can be interpreted as the verb of saying 'please'
In English the Japanese word Seizonsha means Survivor.
There is no Japanese word pronounced "wong".
It's a phrase: "Kazoku ni yoroshiku." It is pronounced: kah-zoh-koo nee yoh-roh-shee-koo.
there is no word si in English
deca in English is ten so in Japanese is ju however if you question is what does the Japanese word Deka mean in English its big
The word mizu in Japanese translated into English is water
"Kyoukai" is a Japanese word and in English it means "Church"
everyone
Album.
deep
Midsummer
Little in Japanese is Sukoshi