"watashi tachi,wareware " is a Japanese word and in English it means "We"
It means: 'My sky'
wrong category but it means "we are moving, is there something you need?
ç§ã¯ç”·ã (watashi wa otoko da) may mean "I'm a man" or "I'm male" in Japanese.
'Watashi WA uso wo tsuite imasen' would mean 'I am not lying.' Omitting 'watashi WA' (: I) is better, yet optional.
You can say, "Watashi tachi ga dekimasu." (私たちが出来ます。) watashi tachi = we or us ga = a particle used between noun and predicate in some forms of Japanese grammar dekimasu = can/is able to do
You can say 私達の (watashi-tachi no) or 我々の (wareware no) to indicate "our".
Watashi-tachi
私達の所 (watashi-tachi no tokoro)
To make any noun into a pural, you add "tachi" on the end. Like "watashi-tachi" is "we". To add ownership, you add "no" to the end of a name or noun. E.g "watashi no kururma" is "My car", or "Kyoto no eki" is "Kyoto station".
Watashi-tachi WA hantai, watashi WA hi de anata WA kōri desu
'Watashi no kawaii oi Chan to mei Chan tachi.'
"tachi" is usually tacked onto another word, indicating more than one. It is only used with words such as "watashi", "boku", etc. For example, "Boku-tachi" is said by a male, and essentially means "My friends and I..." (That is of course assuming that the people he is with are friends. A lot of speaking Japanese is about context.)
運命は私たちです Unmei WA watashi-tachi desu
Watashi no dannasan would be 'My husband' in English.
In Japanese, "tachi" can refer to a traditional style of long sword or katana. It may also mean "stand" or "upright" when used as a suffix, such as in the words "natsumi-tachi" (summer) or "ware-tachi" (we, us).
私たちは四番目のグループです。or "watashi tachi WA yonnbannme no guloopu desu"
俺 (ore) 私 (watashi) 我 (ware) 僕 (boku) are just a few ways to reference oneself in Japanese.watakushi - formal (pronounced more like "watakshi")watashi - everyday useboku - used among males