Nihongo ga (日本語が) is a fairly simple grammatical phrase.
Nihongo means the Japanese language, and 'ga' is a subject marker in a sentence. This means that in the following sentence, Nihongo will be the subject.
kono nihongo ga rikai dekimasuka
anata ga i nakute sabishii desu
"Nihongo wo wakarimasen" = I do not understand Japanese" -- "nihongo wo hanashimasen" = "I do not speak Japanese" 私は日本語を話す No, it's: Watashi WA nihongo ga wakarimasen =I do not understand Japanese Watashi WA nihongo ga hanshimasen = I do not speak Japanese Watashi WA = I Nihongo = Japanese
Anata ga nihongo o benkyō shi tai desu ka without the dear
This can generally be translated as "Japanese is difficult" and "Japanese is hard for me."
Dare mo ga sukoshi nihongo o hanasu to omou. Nihongo wa omoshiroi gengo de, koto ni nannichi no seikatsu ni mo tsukawa reru. Eigo to no kurabete, nihongo no bunpou ya kanji wa chotto muzukashii kedo, benkyou suru no wa tanoshii. Anata wa nihongo o benkyou shiteimasu ka?
'Nihongo ga wakarimasu ka.'
The way I have heard it said most often is "Nihongo ga jouzu desu" (My Japanese is good) or "Nihongo ga perapera desu" (My Japanese is fluent). However, if you need to ask this question, it most likely does not apply to you.
nihongo wo hanasu koto ga hoshii
Masahiro Ono has written: 'Onomatope ga aru kara Nihongo wa tanoshii' -- subject(s): Japanese language, Onomatopoeic words, Mimetic words, Nihongo-Giseigo gitaigo
This can be translated as "I like [the] Japanese [language]."
You spend 5-10 years studying the language (or more, or possibly even less, depending on your skill in language and how long you spend each day studying.)1. Take a deep breath.2. Match phonemes in my mind3. Open my mouth4. Emit sounds that are accepted as intelligible by other speakers of the Japanese language.5. Close my mouth.6. Breath.---For conversation---7. Wait for and process an aural response.(Wash, rinse, repeat.)