Tsuchi =Wood Mizu = Water Fu = Air Hi= Fire
The most common word is "ryoku", but you can also use "riki" and "chikara". All three mean the same thing. You want to be careful though, because when you combine words in Japanese, they often change. For instance, if you want to say water power in Japanese, it becomes suiryoku even though the word for water is "mizu."
the Japanese have no letter or sound for the English L.
"Watahashi" is a humble and formal way to refer to oneself in Japanese. It is equivalent to saying "I" or "me" in English, but it expresses a sense of modesty and politeness.
mouth. or at least that's what youtube tell me
Taki has no definition in English language, -gibberish.
The word mizu in Japanese translated into English is water
"Mizu umi" is a Japanese word and in English it means "Lake"
Mizu means Water!
aqua (water) mizu aqua (colour) mizuiro
The Japanese word for water is 'mizu' (水).
Mizu = water Kage = shadow Mizu kage = water shadow (Probably a ninja move from Naruto, I'm guessing?)
If you mean chemical elements it would be 元素 /gen so/. If you mean 'factor, component, element' it would be 要素 /you so/.If your query is of the five elements in Japanese they are as follows:Kanji/Meaning..........Single Reading...........Reading in Compound Nouns....火 (Fire).............. hi (like 'he' in English).............ka........................................水 (Water)........................mizu........................sui........................................土 (Earth).........................tsuchi.......................do........................................雷 (Lightning)..................kaminari.....................rai.......................................風 (Wind)..........................kaze.......................fuu........................................
It means "(Give me some) water please."
There are many words that are pronounced "tsuchi", but the most common one is 土 which means "soil" in Japanese.
It is written: 龍竜 /ryuu/ is the kanji for 'dragon' in Japanese.
Wind isn't a Japanese word, but "kaze" 風 would be how you say "wind" if that's what you're looking for.
what does it mean in English and I'll find out what it means in Japanese for you