The Japanese language does not consist of singular consonants in the same way that other Western languages do. Rather, it consists of consonant and vowel pairs ('ma, mi, mu, me, mo, da, de, do' and so on and so forth.) As such, one cannot "spell" j d or m in Japanese.
These are the initial letters of the months of the year, January, February . . .etc.
J-u-d-g-e-m-e-n-t
me, a, you, I, b j w t d f
m-a-n-g-o i-n j-a-p-a-n-e-s-e
You can spell many, many, many words with those letters.
M. J. D. Brendell has written: 'Coleoptera'
D M J. Davidson has written: 'Glass and glazing'
D. J. M. Hooson has written: 'Climate and man'
/* Ramana Reddy -IIIT */ #include main() { int a[10][10],i,j,m,n,sum=0; printf("Size of Matrix M*N:\n "); scanf("%d%d",&m,&n); if(m==n) { printf("\nEnter %d elements: \n",m*n); for(i=0;i
dedede
T
M I N D