人
usually said as `jin`
A kanji for 'person' is 人 pronounced as 'Hito', or 'ひと'
It is 'nihonjin,' written: 日本人
Ainu is the term used for the native Japanese inhabitants now only living in Northern Hokkaido
The code talkers were native American from the Navajo tribe. They used their native language to send messages that the Japanese couldn't decode or understand.
There is not a person listed with the name Udon. However, there is a food with this name. Udon is a noodle which is made from what flour and used in many Japanese dishes.
The suffix -san is used in Japanese in much the way the title "Mister" is used in English. It should only be used with the surname or family name. However, because Japanese usage gives the family name first, and English usage gives the family name last, the resulting confusion among those not very familiar with the languages often results in the -san suffix being applied by Japanese to the personal name of a Westerner, and by Westerners to the personal name of a Japanese person.
They used Native American codes that the Japanese couldn't crack.
They used Native American languages.
The meaning of the name is `Fourth` The name Shiro is mainly used In Japanese.
The native plant used for weaving is called flax. The Maori name is Harekeke.
Usually translated as 'cool,' this is not a standard Japanese given name.
Vernacular (the native language or native dialect) is another name that is sometimes used for conversational speech.
As a person's name, Brittany would be ブリタニー (bu ri ta nii). As the name of the French region ブルターニュ /bu ri taa nyu/ is used.
Yes it can be used as a name.