it is 十二, pronounced "jew ni".
it is written the same in chinese, but pronounced shi er
十二 /juu ni/ means the number 'twelve'. 十二時 /juu ni ji/ would mean 'twelve o'clock' and 十二才 /juu ni sai/ 'twelve years old' for instance.
The sentence 'he is twelve years old' would be å½¼ã¯ï¼‘ï¼’æ‰ã§ã™ in Japanese. This would be read as "kare wa nijussai desu".
Juu- itchi
we say Nakagawa if we want to say inside in Japanese.
To say tennis in Japanese.........テニス
メロン is how you say melon in Japanese.
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.
11 = jû ichi
juu ichi no enpitsu
kyu
In kanji:十一 or in romaji:jū ichi
nibanme no hahaoya
this is how u say it but not how its spelled: shoe tah me foa ockese
You may say '[ginkou no] kouzabangou,' written in Japanese as: [銀行の]口座番号
18 over 11 as a mixed number = 17/11
8 is八 (hachi) in Japanese. To say 'number 8' or 'eighth', you would say八番 (hachiban).
It's an alternate way to say the number seven (7), which is officially shichi.
"Jyu-Roku" Literally Ten Six
Forty in Japanese would be yon-jyuu. (Japanese say the amount of tens there are, so 80 would be hachi-jyuu (eight tens)