Nisshoku
Helium was first discovered in the sun. It gets its name from the Greek word, Helios, meaning the sun
Ichiban hayai
A lunar eclipse is when the moon appears dark/absent because it moves into the shadow of the earth. The earth is essentially blocking the moon from the sun. A solar eclipse is when the sun is blocked by the moon.
The Japanese word for miracle is "奇跡" (kiseki).
If you are referring to you eyes, no, definitely not. A SOLAR eclipse is what is dangerous to look at, because the moon is in front of the sun. In a lunar eclipse the sun is in front of the moon. The logic might seem kinda backwards, but it all adds up to the single word that NO, lunar eclipses ARE NOT DANGEROUS.
When referring to solar/lunar eclipses, it would be 'shoku,' written: 食
Eclipse in Japanese is Nisshoku (knee-show-coo) - Japanese symbols - 日食
This is a solar eclipse, specifically a total eclipse (Total solar eclipse I think is how you would word it).
No, the word 'solar' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (solar energy, solar eclipse, solar flare, etc.)A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.
solar - 太陽 (Taiyō)
Eclipse.
the meaning of interference in Japanese is interference, a meaning doesn't change, the word that means it does. the word interference in Japanese is "Kanshō"
"Itish" is not a Japanese word.
There is no such word in Japanese - shrine is an English word.
The word solar means relating to or derived from the Sun, or utilizing the energies of the Sun, e.g. "solar eclipse" , "solar energy".
yagi is the Japanese word for goat
日食 Nisshoku