'I'm studying Japanese.' 'Korekara' has the meaning of "after this," "from here on," "now," etc.
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.
"sumimasen, shitsurei shimasu" is a Japanese phrase and in English it means "Excuse me"
(宿題) Ben-kyo Benkyo is how you say homework in Japanese.
Onegai shimasu Douzo Kudasai All three mean "please", but are used in different contexts. "Onegai shimasu" is the most polite.
Nihongo is associated with the Japanese language. Japanese is spoken by over 125 million people and there are dozens of different types of dialects in Japan.
ira is need and shimasu is to do, so it is to need. :)
"I am studying the Japanese language." Watashi wa = I am Nihongo = Japanese (language) Obenkyou = Study Shiteimasu = I am doing (the aforementioned verb)
Hanoyome, in Japnese (A.K.A. Nihongo), means Wife in Japanese
"Who did you learn that Japanese from?"
This can be translated as "Your Japanese is very good," or "You speak Japanese very well".
It means study pretty much. If you wanted to say that that's what you're doing, you'd say (Watashi wa) benkyoo o shimasu.
'Sugoi yo anata no nihongo' translates literally to 'It's great your Japanese (language)' , 'umai umai nande darou' could mean 'delicious delicious what is it I wonder?' .. note please that umai could mean nice, good, skillful, clever.. so depending on the situation it's used you can decide what it means.