shin ju means to make love and/ or anal sex
To spell a Japanese word with English letters is called Romaji. The word legendary in Romaji is: denkiteki.
Lava in Romaji Japanese can be:Kazangan - meaning volcanic rock or lava. It is pronounced: Kah - zahn - gahnor:Yougan - meaning lava sack/lava.
Romaji is when you write Japanese words in English letters, for example, "Kaibutsu" means monster, except its not in Japanese symbols. SO, to write in romaji, just write in English alphabet!
'Sadistic' in Japanese [Katakana] is: サディスティック In Romaji (English Pronuniation), this reads: Sadesuteku
カメレオン (Kanji)Kamereon (Romaji)
In Japanese It Is Kingu , It Is Called Romaji When Written in English
It's written: ケリー in romaji: Kerii
Dexter is デクスター or dekusutaa when written in romaji.
To spell a Japanese word with English letters is called Romaji. The word legendary in Romaji is: denkiteki.
It's called 'Romanization' when a Japanese word is written in English letters, and the word is called Romaji. So the romaji for 'sweetness' is 'amasa' and 'amami' means 'sugary/sweet flavor, sweetness'.
Lava in Romaji Japanese can be:Kazangan - meaning volcanic rock or lava. It is pronounced: Kah - zahn - gahnor:Yougan - meaning lava sack/lava.
デラノ (romaji : derano) is Japanese for name : Delano
Romaji is when you write Japanese words in English letters, for example, "Kaibutsu" means monster, except its not in Japanese symbols. SO, to write in romaji, just write in English alphabet!
English meaning: Rain Romaji (Roman writing): Ame Hiragana: あめ Kanji: 雨
Volcano in Japanese is 火山. These are kanji symbols meaning: 火-fire and 山-mountain. In romaji form the word is Kazan.
If by English names you mean into romaji - which is a readable version of Japanese then yes there is. An example of what I mean is; 日本国 - Nihonkoku Meaning Japan. http://www.romaji.org/
The Japanese script consists of three writing systems: Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Hiragana and Katakana are syllabaries with characters representing sounds, while Kanji are logographic characters borrowed from Chinese. Japanese text often combines all three scripts in written communication.