It translates to "I am THE God".
Watashi means I, Puri can mean pre, while Anata is you. But this is does not have a particle so I cannot translate this properly sorry.
"Watashi wa Isuru desu" is Japanese and translates to "I am Isuru." "Watashi" means "I" or "me," "wa" is a particle indicating the subject of the sentence, and "desu" is a copula verb used for emphasis or to indicate politeness.
Are you Canadian? I think. Watashi Ha Kanadajin Desu = I'm Canadian
We or I love Alice.
Bad romaji. Corrected: 'watashi wa anata no tsubasa desu koto wo shitteiru na'. It means 'You know that I am your wings'.
The Japanese phrase, '~desu WA' does not really mean anything; it is basically like an ending for a sentence that is not necessary. (Example: Watashi WA namae WA Keiichiro ~desu WA. [Translation: My name is Keiishiro.])
to say you dislike something you would start by sying watashi WA (i ) then say the object ; for example: Watashi WA hana (flower) ga kirai desu. . . you could also substitute daikirai for kirai if you wish to say you strongly dislike or hate the thing.
If you're saying that with a tone of being surprised about yourself, it would be 'Watashi naka okashii desu' [It could also mean 'There's something weird with me']. If you just mean to say you are a funny person you could say 'Watashi WA kokkei nano desu'.
(Watashi wa) chokoreto ga hoshi desu means:I want chocolate. OR I need chocolate.Hoshi means to want or to need. They basically mean the same thing!! :PWatashi wa CAN be omitted.HDorHEATHER :D
[I'm only learning myself, so I'm sorry if this is wrong.]To the best of my understanding, there's essentially 4 compontents to this:Honto ka \ Watashi \ wakarimasen ka \ Sou desu ne.Honto ka: Really?Watashi: I [formal]Wakarimasen ka: I don't understand? / I'm not sure?Sou desu ne: Let me see.So, as a literal translation:Really? I don't understand, let me see.Hope this helps.
It kind of means 'is'. Like, let's say you were saying 'this is sushi', you say 'sushi desu'. If you just said 'sushi'... well, you'd just be saying sushi. I am cold = samui desu [samui - cold] This is the post office = Yubin kyoku desu [yubin kyoku - post office] This is me = watashi desu [watashi - I/me/myself] Get it? ^-^
ç§ã¯ãƒ‹ã‚¢ã§ã™ (watashi wa nia desu) would be used to mean 'I am Nia' in Japanese. This would be assuming that the speaker's name is 'Nia'. Another possible translation may be 'I am near'. However, I believe that the latter is less likely.