Translate Japanese to English

Words and Phrases Sorted Alphabetically by japanese:
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Japanese:English:
saboten cactus
saidan altar
saiyôsuru, saiyôsuru adopt
sake booze
sake liquor
sake spirits
sake strong drink
sake, arukôru alcohol
sakeru avoid
sakeru evade
sakura, sakura no ki cherry-tree
sakuranbo cherry
samui, tumetai bleak
samui, tumetai chilly
samui, tumetai, samusa, kaze cold
sansû arithmetic
sara course
sara dish
sara plate
sara platter
seidô bronze
seihonsuru, sibaru bind
seihukusuru conquer
seikatai chorus
seikatai coir
seiki centennial
seiki century
sekitan coal
semento cement
senaka back
senseigaku astrology
sensyu athlete
sentaku choice
sentaku election
senti centimetre
sentyô captain
seriuri auction
serori celery
si; to; -te and
sibaru connect
sibaru join
sibaru tie
sibaru tie up
sigatu April
sihonsyugisya capitalist
siki ceremony
simeru close
simeru shut
sinsitu bedroom
sintyû, sintyû brass
sion aster
siro castle
soko bottom
soko foundation
soko ground
soko ni, asoko ni, soko ni there
soroban ball-frame
soroban counting-frame
soroban, soroban, soroban abacus
soyokaze breeze
sôzyô abbot
sugi cedar
sugu ni at once
sugu ni immediately
sugu ni just
sugu ni right away
sugu ni right now
suisei comet
sumi charcoal
suppai acetous
suppai sour
suppai tart
suppai, san acid
suzuki bass
syanpen champagne
syanpinion mushroom
syasyô guard
syôdaku acceptance
syôdaku, hakuzyô, zikyô admission
syôheki barrier
syokubutugaku botany
syokuyoku appetite
syônô camphor
syuhu, syuto capital
syuhu, syuto capital city
syuzin boss
syuzin chief
syuzin leader
Four Writing Systems
Japanese has four different writing systems; kanji, hiragana, katakana, and romanji. Kanji was imported from China in the 6th Century AD. It has over 2,000 signs. Hiragana is used in children’s books and for simple words, conjugations, and participles. It’s usually the first one people learn. Katakana is the type of writing reserved for foreign words. Romanji is the romantic version of Japanese in written form, often simplifying original words.
Unlike other languages which are written from right to left horizontally, Japanese is also written vertically in columns from right to left.
Unlike Any Other Language
Some languages are derived from others like Latin, Spanish, or French for example. Japanese is not. Until recent studies by linguists, it was classified as a language isolate. But shares common features with Ryukyuan languages, indigenous to Southern Japan.
Talk Fast
Japanese is spoken at a rate of 7.84 syllables-per second, making it one of the fastest spoken languages among native speakers. English is only spoken at 6.19 syllables-per second by comparison which is nearly 2 syllables slower!