"Ogenki desu ka?" is "are you well?" in Japanese.
'Samui desu ka' is how you can say it.
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"Well" has several meanings in English, so I'm not sure which "well" you are referring to. However, "well" as in the sort one draws water from would be 'i' in Japanese.
Ryuu. or you can use Tatsu as well,
'Nan desuka kono kankaku/kanji.'Use whichever more suitable to your intended meaning:Kankaku: sensation, feeling, intuitionKanji: feeling, emotion, impression
well... oean means umi, and ryuu means dragon
You can say "kimochi", which means feeling.
"Ogenki desu ka?" is "are you well?" in Japanese.
I'm not feeling well is "Je suis mal" or "Je suis malade".
Anata mo
The say they are not feeling very well.
Well, this is how you say dwarf hamster in japanese- ドワーフハムスター
As well as greeting other people, Japanese people bow to express a feeling of respect, thanking, and apologizing.
In Hindi, you would say "मैं ठीक महसूस नहीं कर रहा/रही हूँ" (Main theek mehsoos nahi kar raha/rahi hoon) to indicate that you are not feeling well.
To say the word appetizer in Japanese, you would say Zensai. There is a symbolic translation of the word appetizer as well.
よく or yoku
In all truth, the word 'the' is left out in Japanese. In order to say 'the cat', you just say neko. As well as to say 'the dog' you just say inu.
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