It can be translated as "Let's speak with [our] voice(s)."
Hanasemasuka means "Can you speak?". An example of its use is "Nihongo ga hanasemasuka" which means "can you speak Japanese?" It originates from the verb Hanasu (to speak), turned into hanasemasu (polite form of " being able to speak) and then the sufffix "ka" added to make it a question.
This can be translated as "kind/gentle you."
anata no
Ima = nowWA = (topic marker)ie = houseni = (place marker)imasu = exists at (for living beings only; not for inanimate objects)anata = youIma WA ie ni imasu = "I am currentlyat home."Anata WA? = "How about you? (Are you at home?)"
MEANS: "Now I'm at home, and you? (are where? / what about you?)..." ima - now WA - is (I am) ie - home / house ni - inside (ni is used for other meanings but IE NI is IN HOME) imasu - I am / am (formal) ... anata WA - You Are(?) (Casual Japanese - and how about you can be just "...and you?") Cheers, E-2-J-BLOG
Oniisan If you consider them really close to you then you can call them 'oniichan'
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
you mean what you mean
Mean is the average.
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
The arithmetic mean is a weighted mean where each observation is given the same weight.