If you're referring to a photograph, it is 'shashin.' If you are referring to something draw, painted, or otherwise not produced by a camera, you may say 'e.'
we say Nakagawa if we want to say inside in Japanese.
メロン is how you say melon in Japanese.
To say tennis in Japanese.........テニス
To say blue fish in Japanese you say ブルーフィッシュ.
This is no word for a or the in Japanese.
You may say "Shashin [wo] totte ii/yoroshii desu/deshou ka."
If the picture in question is a photograph, you may say: 'Kono shashin ga daisuki desu.' If it is a drawing/painting/etc., you may say 'Kono e ga daisuki desu.'
In the context of paintings, you may say 'seibutsu,' written: 静物 To say "still life picture," you may say 'seibutsuga,' written: 静物画
絵 (e) means "picture" or "illustration" in Japanese.
"Is there a picture of or article on the last Japanese soldier to surrender on Iwo Jima?"
how to say "editor" in japanese
To say old Japanese illustrations in Japanese, you say "Mukashi no Nihon no irasuto".
Dennis Sheheen has written: 'Children's Picture Dictionary' 'A child's picture dictionary' -- subject(s): Alphabet, Arabic, Arabic Picture dictionaries, Arabic language, Arabic language materials, Bilingual, English, English Picture dictionaries, English language, French, French Picture dictionaries, French language, French language materials, German, German Picture dictionaries, German language, German language materials, Hebrew, Hebrew Picture dictionaries, Japanese, Japanese Picture dictionaries, Japanese language, Japanese language materia
we say Nakagawa if we want to say inside in Japanese.
メロン is how you say melon in Japanese.
To say tennis in Japanese.........テニス
フライドポテト is how you say it in japanese'