and doesn't yatta mean something like that?
It's an honourific and means something like 'Mr.' or 'Ms."
something
Sweet in Japanese is ็ใ (amai). It can refer to the taste of something sweet, like sugar, or be used more broadly to describe something as charming or cute.
when you dont like something or you are not goot at something. for example if u say "suugaku ga nigate" that would mean you're not good at math or you dont like math.
In general, it means that "I like <something or someone>". In certain contexts it also could me "I like you" or "I love you".
When you say stream, if you mean something like "river" then the word would be "kawa" or "かわ"。
It's not Japanese it's Japanese word for a foreign name word. That name could be Lule, Luray or something of similarity, since Japanese read English words just like they are written and they are inserted into katakana just like that.
There isn't one single character in Japanese that is used to mean 'freedom'. The word for 'freedom' is?? (jiyuu). This would be pronounced something like 'gee-you'.
If you mean it to be something like "Number one grandchild" then it is 一番の孫
It means "come to think of it," or "which reminds me..."
'Nanda' sounds Japanese but the o in the end could be just an interjection. 'Nanda' could mean different things when used in different situations, it could mean 'what??', 'what is it?', 'what (is that/did you say/etc) or sometimes at the end of sentence it adds something like 'it's like that', 'that's how it is' to the sentence. You might mean 'Nandou' which is a Japanese name.