"Urusai wa ne" (うるさいわね) is a Japanese phrase that translates to "You're noisy, aren't you?" or "How annoying!" in English. It expresses annoyance or irritation, often in a somewhat playful or teasing manner. The phrase combines "urusai" (うるさい), meaning "noisy" or "annoying," with "wa ne" (わね), which adds a soft, feminine touch to the statement. It's commonly used in casual conversations.
Kamabisushii, kashimashii, urusai and souzoushii all mean noisy. You would use "Urusai" to tell someone to shut up in Japanese.
Honto wa ne was created on 2008-07-23.
'Ne.. kimi WA ii tomo da' or 'Kimi WA ii tomo dayo ne' is casual Japanese for that sentence.
shizukani
Wahine (Wa He Ne)
What does WA mean in Hebrew and then what does WA mean in Tahitian
'Heiki' means fine. For example, when people say "watashi WA heiki", in other words, it means: "I'm fine."
urusai or hade:)
'Sore WA okashii desu ne'.
urusai means shut up
Kimi wa tenshi da ne!
Aloha: There are no such words as walene and valeen in Hawai`ian. Wa le ne (3 seperate words) is "leisurely wandering".