It is the polite simple present, as well as future form, of the very 'taberu' meaning 'to eat'. Depending on the subject and how it is used, it can mean 'will eat, eat, eats' . Ex: [Kare wa gohan wo tabemasu ka?] = [Does he eat/will he eat rice?] *gohan can mean cooked rice as a meal, and also a meal in general.
This means "his."
Sushi.
in flatfish i gather you mean a flounder which isヒラメ Hirame sole is Kare
It means "who is", with extra attention to the "who". Dare ga kimasu ka? (WHO is coming?) Dare ga tabemasu ka? (WHO is eating?)
Sushi refers to anything made with vinegared rice. Sushi means sushi, much the same way that "hot dog" means ... "hot dog."
You mean Japanese food? Because I don't know what japanise food is. But if you do mean Japanese, I would suggest sushi.
Sushi.寿司 edge,end, flower, margin, nasal mucus, nose, petal, point, snivel, snot, tip. All those are words that Hana can mean in Japanese
Means 'he is here', 'he is presen here'. On weaker posibilities, but it could also mean 'he comes (in) here' and 'he stays here'.
"Kare" in Maori means "no" or "not". It is used to express negation or refusal.
"Katal kare" in Punjabi translates to "to kill" in English.
Sashimi means "pierced body " in Japanese.