お寿司の時間ですよ : (o su shi no ji kan de su yo) is a polite way to say that, you can remove the 'o' (お) from beginning and replace 'desu yo' (ですよ) with 'da yo' (だよ) to make it more casually spoken.
You may say 'oishii sushi,' written: おいしい寿司
You would spell it "sushi" because the word is Japanese.
One of the simplest grammatical sentence structures is that of "[noun] wa [noun/adjective] desu." You can use this construction to say that "something is something." For example: 'kare wa gakusei desu.' "He is a student." Written in Japanese: 彼は学生です。
Oh, dude, you wanna sound all fancy and international, huh? Well, in Japanese, you say "healthy food" as "健康食品" which is pronounced as "kenkou shokuhin." So, like, next time you're ordering sushi or ramen, you can impress everyone by asking for some "kenkou shokuhin." You're welcome!
just the same as English
Sushi. It is the same word, since we get it from the Japanese language.
Sushi, the Japanese term for a raw fish dish, is also used in German.Das Sushi
You may say 'oishii sushi,' written: おいしい寿司
Sushi is a luxury for most Japanese, albeit an affordable one. Families I am familiar with might eat sushi once a month. If your question means "Is sushi a food most Japanese eat?," the answer would be "yes," but, again, not so often as, say, cooked fish and rice.
They play hopscotch and eat sushi
Yes. Sushi is Japanese.
The word "sushi" comes from the Japanese language.
Sushi originates from Japan.
Sushi originated from Japan so the Japanese people created sushi.
寿司 shou(4) si(1)(However, sushi is a Japanese food)
sushi came from southeast asia
You would spell it "sushi" because the word is Japanese.