In the U.S., the state of Ohio's name sounds similar to a Japanese word for "hello," romanized as ohayou.
The Japanese word for 'good morning' sounds almost identical to the US state of Ohio. The word is おはよう (ohayou).
It means "Hello/Good day, how are you?"edit: Actually, konnichiwa literally means 'today' with a subject marker, so 'konnichiwa, ogenki desu ka' would mean (literally) 'How are you today?'This is how konnichiwa became 'hello/good afternoon', by the way. People kept saying the full sentence until it just became konnichiwa.In true formal, olden Japanese, saying konnichiwa on its own would be inappropriate, because it would leave the sentence hanging. In English, it would sound something like 'Today,'You can tell this because the sound 'wa' isn't written わ (wa), but は(ha). The sound ha is pronounced wa when used as a marker (or particle) in a sentence, effectively working as a comma.Hope all that ^ made sense.
よう means style/way/likeness/state
"Shizukari" is a Japanese term that means tranquility or calmness. It refers to a state of peacefulness and quietness.
No. they're just coincidentally from the same state.
it is the American Gold Finch. coincidentally enough this birds is purely vegetarian
"Aloha" is the traditional Hawaiian greeting. It can meet "Hello" or "Goodbye."
It means the USA state of Indiana. インディアナ州 (Indiana-shū) The given name of Indiana is インディアナ (Indiana) in Japanese script.
August 21st. Coincidentally, on this same day in 1959, Hawaii became a state. This is also the 134th day on leap years.
Alaska. Coincidentally, Alaska is the only US State that borders either the Bering Sea or the Beaufort Sea.
The Japanese refer to their own country as "Nihon" or "Nippon" in their language.
Alaska. Coincidentally, Alaska is the only US State that borders either the Bering Sea or the Beaufort Sea.