This means 'happy new year.'
"Tanjoubi omedetou!" is a Japanese phrase and in English it means "Happy Birthday!"
yes
新年 /shin nen/ means 'new year', and written 信念 /shin nen/ it would mean 'faith'.
this is really spelt badly so the meaning is ambiguous and it is in the wrong category. but chisaydes could mean chisaidesu = it is small ohayo gozaymas = ohayo gozaimasu = good morning
Arigatō or arigatou means "thank you". If you were to say "arigatou gozaimasu", it would be the same as thank you very much. ありがとう ございます (arigatou gozaimasu). You could also say "domo" which would be the equivalent of "thanks". It's impolite, so it would only be used around friends or maybe someone younger than you. It is spelled arigatou (ありがとう). Other ways to say thanks, thank you, etc. arigatou (ありがとう) [most common] doumo (どうも) [most common] doumo arigatou (どうもありがとう) arigatou gozaimasu (ありがとうございます) doumo gozaimasu (どうもございます) doumo arigatou gozaimasu (どうもありがとうございます) [most polite/gracious]
It's "congratulations". A more formal way of saying it is "omedetou gozaimasu"
Oh tahn joe bee Oh meh deh toe Go zai mas.
"Tanjoubi omedetou!" is a Japanese phrase and in English it means "Happy Birthday!"
Good morning.
yes
'Ohayou gozaimasu' is the Japanese equivalent of 'good morning'.
I'm not exactly sure, but 'otanjoubi' means birthday and 'doumo arigato gozaimasu' means thanks, so it probably means 'thank you for the birthday card'? Not sure...
新年 /shin nen/ means 'new year', and written 信念 /shin nen/ it would mean 'faith'.
It means "Happy Birthday Tsukino Usagi". they use -san as honorifics (for respect). :)
"Hontou ni doumo (arigatou gozaimasu)" means "truly thank you very much!"
You may say 'arigatou gozaimasu,' written: ありがとうございます
this is really spelt badly so the meaning is ambiguous and it is in the wrong category. but chisaydes could mean chisaidesu = it is small ohayo gozaymas = ohayo gozaimasu = good morning