I would recommend Japanese Letters for example Hiragana. They look like paintings and you can even learn to write and read them. You can improve your Japanese with them.
The Warden, Zero and the Yelnats family.
It would not be strange but it would be difficult -- your readers are not likely to be able to read Japanese and know how to sound out the letters.
Yes, I can read letters of recommendation for you.
If it's written in Japanese and you know how to read Japanese then you just read it while pronouncing place names as they are. If you don't know how to read it you just ask for a 'Roumaji' (Pronunciation of the Japanese words written in English - Like 'watashi' which means 'I' in Japanese) or you ask someone who can read Japanese to help you.
They do. Toyota Matsuda Nissan but they do not write in Japanese letters. they retain their Japanese names. but writing using letters of the alphabet. to be easily understood by everyone
i cant read the letters in the box sorry
letters
Japanese Letters are written in a different traditional style than the English language. Japanese is written in the roman alphabet and each letter stands for a sound. Japanese sentence structure is much different then the English structure.
Though Japanese Kanji does come from the Chinese, modern Chinese has been simplified, so in many cases the Japanese Kanji is an older, different character. Japanese hiragana and katakana, however, do not exist in Chinese.
'Egaku,' written 描く in Japanese.
To spell a Japanese word with English letters is called Romaji. The word legendary in Romaji is: denkiteki.