Aside from Kanji, there is Hiragana and Katakana (which are under a group called Kana).
When Japanese is written using English letters (technically Latin letters), it's called "romaji" or romanization.
The Shinto Shrine Archway - Torii written in Kanji is 鳥居
The word "mine" in Japanese means "ridge" or "peak". For the name, there are several different kanji's for it.
Volcano in Japanese is 火山. These are kanji symbols meaning: 火-fire and 山-mountain. In romaji form the word is Kazan.
The Japanese use symbols, known as kanji, as part of their writing system because each symbol represents a whole word or concept, allowing for more efficient communication. Kanji were originally borrowed from Chinese characters but have evolved over time to include uniquely Japanese elements. In addition to kanji, the Japanese writing system also includes two other scripts, hiragana and katakana, which are used for phonetic purposes.
The Kanji for "water" is 水
Kayla cannot be written in Japanese kanji because (1) it isn't a Japanese word, and (2) there is no such sound as "l" in Japanese.
The Japanese word for earth is Tsuchi. At least, when it's written in Kanji it is.
In Kanji it's Kazan.
The Japanese word for culture, "bunka", is written as 文化 in Kanji.
Kanji is a symbolic type alphabet used by the Japanese to write. It is derived from the Chinese written symbols and has many similarities with Chinese. Each symbol has a meaning or whole word associated with it, as opposed to the English alphabet where we only have individual letters that don't mean anything on their own. The Japanese have 4 writing systems: 1. Hiragana (for native Japanese words) 2. Katakana (for foreign/imported words and to emphasise a word) 3. Kanji (symbolic alphabet) 4. Romaji (This is essentially the English alphabet that they include in some of their day-to-day life, mostly numbers) Kanji contains up to 40,000 different symbols, but most Japanese know between 1,000-4,000.
The kanji is 歳 (sai).
Esupaa, silent u