The verb "to stand" is 'tatsu,' written in hiragana as: たつ
sto, stare, steti, statum (to stand, stand firm, stand up.)
To stand up is 'se lever' in French. "Stand up!" is "levez-vous !" or more dryly, "debout !"
shadow --------- Your hair --------- Your feet
its not japanese...JUST a part of a joke on facebook...grow up man..
It depends on the kind of bomb. 爆 - means 'explode, blow up' 水爆 and 原爆 are expressions for Hydrogen Bombs and Atomic Bombs respectively
Look up on google the HIRAGANA symbols for: -I -Ku and -To
The verb "to do" is 'suru' or 'yaru' in Japanese.
You need to write that part of the sentence in hiragana actually. katakana would only be used for your actual name because katakana is used for foreign words. I can't type in the kana scripts here, but if u take the romaji i write here and look up a hiragana chart on the net, it's very easy to change it. watashi no namae ha _____ desu. the 'ha' is pronounced 'wa' (not always but in this case)
I generally write stand up comedy with any available writing implement while standing up.
Emily in Japanese is usually in KATAKANA, not HIRAGANA (if a Japanese child is named Emily it will be written in Hiragana/Kanji). Katakana is like: アイウエオ and Hiragana is like: あいうえお Emily: エミリー (katakana) えみり (hiragana); to pronounce just say the same as English, it will sound the same to Japanese ears. If you pronounce it the way it is written in katakana you just make the last vowel sound (lee) shorter. There are a few kanji that you can use to make the name Emily. 恵美理 or 絵未里 or some other combinations of え, み, and り You can look up sites to phonetically force kanji to your name. An example of a forced kanji combination that reads as "emiri" is 絵未里.
The verb 'tatsu' means "to stand." To command someone to stand up, you may say 'tatte kudasai.'
This might not be FULLY true, but i believe that in Hiragana (ひらがな) there are 46, i am not quite sure about Katakana (カタカナ) or Kanji.
Japanese language uses 2 alphabets (hiragana and katakana) in addition to more complex characters that are derived from the Chinese written language. Kanji (Japanese characters) are the same as Chinese characters.
in japanese you usually write sideways like normal but on posters or when ever it is relevant you can write downwards. :) hope i helped you.
日本語 (Japanese) uses some Chinese letters called Kanji. They also use Katakana for foreign words like chenji(change), and Hiragana for their own syllables. Romaji is Japanese words put into Latin script, how we would read it.
Appeasement, straight up appeasement.
Appeasement, straight up appeasement.