Literally translated, light blade would be 'hikari no katana,' written: 光の刀 I would suggest that instead of "dark blade," you go with "shadow blade/blade of shadows," as not only does it sound better than the literal translation of "dark blade," but also stands better as an opposite to a "blade of light." That would be 'kage no katana,' written: 影の刀
闇ブレイド
Yami bureido
Small wonder, then, that in Japan the English word customer has become synonymous with the Japanese phrase for "honored guest."
no
Phrases used in manga and anime are not always in dictionaries. If you read manga, and are familiar with Japanese, you can find the raw version, figure out how your wanted phrase is written in Japanese (kanji) and try online dictionaries such as dic.yahoo.co.jp , goo.ne.jp, jisho.org, bab.la, EUdict.com, among many others to figure out each of kanji's meaning. If not then wiki's almost always work, especially for famous stuff like Bleach.
Dog in Japanese is 'inu'.
This is not a Japanese phrase.
闇 YamiOr, alternatively, kurasa.
'Suteki na uta.'
I think it's the name of place
Yami no tenshi means angel of darkness.
Small wonder, then, that in Japan the English word customer has become synonymous with the Japanese phrase for "honored guest."
The phrase "What is the time" in Japanese would translate to "Nan ji desuka?" which would use the Japanese text: 何時ですか。 Where 何 means "what" and 時 means "time".
In order to translate this Japanese phrase a person would need to convert the English characters into Japanese characters or Kanji. Then, the characters could be input into an online translation service.
No, you would only say 'the Japanese' if you were talking about people from Japan. You would not use 'the' when talking about the language, unless you said 'the Japanese language'.
"nandemonai" is a phrase meaning "it's nothing"
Write translate on google, click the first one, and then type your sentence needed to be translated. You can change the languages too!
"Tchow TOOT-to" is a way to pronounce the Italian phrase Ciao, tutto! The words serve as a conversational, colloquial, friendly, informal greeting and a masculine singular adjective/noun/pronoun. They translate into English as "Hello (Hi), all (everybody, everyone, everything)!"
暗闇の中で月光 Kurayami no naka de gekkō