Kare WA de hataraite iru. (Carry WA day ha-tar-ate ay-ru)
First off, "my" is not a phrase. わたし + の + item Depending on your gender and social status, there are various ways of saying "my". The standard, one-size-fits-all phrase is "Watashi no + item", which works for all genders and all social levels.
Free us according to your miraculous works.
"That digs (makes a hole in the ground)!" literally and "That works!" loosely are English equivalents of the French phrase Ça bêche! The pronunciation will be "sa besh" in French.
"The uttered word" is an English equivalent of the Greek phrase logos prophorikos. The phrase refers to the spoken word of God. It works in contrast to logos endiathetos ("the word remaining within") for reason.
Harriet Martineau
Chiyu. This means healing, cure and recovery. Also consider Reiki, the Japanese healing method which uses Universal Life Force. Reiki can be translated as universal life force. Note: Japanese is a language which works in concepts, whereas English is mostly a name based language.
いい (ii) or 良い (yoi) can both mean good. As a side note, 良い is the base for all the other "good" stems (良かった [yokatta, for example]), though if you are using present-tense いい works just as well.
A beast with two backs is a term, originating in the works of Shakespeare, for two people engaging in sexual intercourse - a phrase translated from the original French phrase by Rabelais.
no. Nintendo dsi are region locked. that means that if you buy a Japanese dsi then it only works with Japanese games
IT CAN BE TRANSLATED TO ENGLISH AS FOLLOWED. You know how that works.
Could that possibly "meilleur coupeur"? In which case it works out as best cutter (as in a person who cuts (grass, cloth) Possibly the Latin, not French, "Mea culpa". A Latin phrase usually translated into English as "my fault", or "my own fault".
"Don Quijote" has been translated into over 50 languages, making it one of the most widely translated literary works in history. It has been translated into languages such as English, French, German, Italian, Russian, and Japanese, among many others.