a book on Japanese war crimes would be one
whats the question?
anything. it shouldn't matter if the person is Japanese or not.
Totoro, commander of all things Japanese, fuzzy, and cute.
"Ino" in Japanese can refer to a variety of things depending on the context. It can mean "boar," "rice field," "person from a specific village," or it can even be part of a person's name.
feed, as in to give food to an animal: esa wo yaru as to give food to a person: tabesaseru
"Watashi wa Akumu desu". But it wouldn't make sense to a Japanese speaking person... I guess we don't express things that way..
"Bad person" is 悪人 (akunin) in Japanese.
Depends on the person, for example, I gave my Japanese friend a bag full of candy and a CD w/ all her favorite music, and she loved it... she was very happy!
click on the item you want to give them and touch the person
'She' in Japanese is kanojo (third person)
The Japanese language The Japanese culture
The person who saw the Japanese theather is the person who got to see it.
It depends on if an Antartican person studied Japanese language or if a Japanese person went to Antartica, but yes, it is possible for someone to speak Japanese in Antartica.