tanoshii toki
tanoshii jiki when reminiscing
Often times you may use 'Yatta' in contexts where English speakers would say "hooray."
Japanese is translated all over the world on a daily basis. It's impossible to express this in "number of times."
The Japanese word for shade is "kage". It also can mean "shadow" or "other side" depending on the context it is placed in. Also, at times, instead of using the Japanese word, it will be written or pronounced as "sheedo" or "she-do" in an effort to make it sound similar to the English word.
That is not Japanese, you might mean 'konnichiwa' which can mean 'hello, good day etc' and is used as standard greeting during different times of day.
Ai bei tempi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "To good times!" The masculine plural prepositional phrase translates literally as "To the beautiful times!" in English. The pronunciation will be "eye bey TEM-pee" in Pisan Italian.
Grazie mille! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thanks very much!" The courtesy translates literally as "Thank you a thousand (times)!" in English. The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey MEEL-ley" in Italian.
"Two times five" in English is due per cinque in Italian.
bei momenti (if short times) bei tempi (if long times)
The Bible has been translated into about 5000 modern languages, plus many more other languages down through the centuries that are not used now. The Bible has been translated into English about 80 times since John Wycliff's first English translation.
"Good-times kitty-cat" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Minouche des bons temps. The pronunciation of the feline-related prepositional phrase -- which references a Pensacola Pelican Press publication by Jack Fabian and which translates literally as "kitty-cat of the good times" and loosely as "Fun-loving kitty-cat" -- will be "mee-noosh dey bo taw" in French.
Yes, the phrase "5 times a number" is a mathematical word phrase. It represents a multiplication operation, where "5" is a coefficient and "a number" is a variable that can take different values. This phrase can be translated into a mathematical expression, typically written as (5x), where (x) stands for the unspecified number.
Translation: Let the good times roll on...