you mean ne sama neh sah-mah ne can mean like say or hey some thing like that and sama is someone higher then you like it means like lord or master or something like that so it probably means say lord or like sesshomaru sama sesshomaru is the the powerful one so it means lord sesshomaru and there you go and hey in Japanese is oi in guy terms i don't remember girls it could mean chotto but chotto a means a second or a minute like chotto matte that mean wait a sec because matte means wait
"Ne sana" does not have a direct translation in Japanese. If you provide more context or explain the meaning behind it, I can help you find a suitable Japanese translation.
In Japanese, the number 2 is spelled as δΊ (ni).
No, "chow" is actually an informal way of saying goodbye in English, not Japanese. In Japanese, "goodbye" is typically expressed as "sayonara" (γγγγͺγ) or "jaa ne" (γγγγ).
very, sananina verysana = very ni=Me, na= have, sana= veryNo: The contributor has provided a loose definition for a couple of particles that have no meaning except as part of longer words.The questioner probably meant sana, sana, tena sana, literally "very very again very," which is just a means of intensifying "very," which is an intensifier itself. It's commonly heard.Sananina in the question is a meaningless string of syllables. A possible intensifier is sana sana na sana, but this contributor has never heard anyone say it.
"Karibu sana" means "you are very welcome" in Swahili. It is a common phrase used to welcome someone warmly or to show hospitality.
"sana maayos ang kalagayan mo", or you can say "sana nasa maayos ang kalagayan mo"
'sana ne'
The name Sana from Kodocha is of Japanese origin. In Japanese, "Sana" can mean "brilliant" or "bright."
am, is or are
ja ne mata ne
NekoL ne-ko (ne as in neck + koh) Neko ne-ko (ne as in neck + koh)
ne-how
No, "chow" is actually an informal way of saying goodbye in English, not Japanese. In Japanese, "goodbye" is typically expressed as "sayonara" (γγγγͺγ) or "jaa ne" (γγγγ).
ケネス /ke ne su/ is Japanese for the name 'Kenneth'.
ne hidre
Ja ne, mata ne, mata, Ja mata
In Japanese, the number 2 is spelled as δΊ (ni).
'Jaa, mata,' 'jaa ne,' 'mata ne' are all acceptable.