Japanese does not have a word for "it."
It is a Japanese word. I don't know it, but I know it's a Japanese word.
the word for 'volcano' in Japanese is "kazan" or "funkazan"
To say the word appetizer in Japanese, you would say Zensai. There is a symbolic translation of the word appetizer as well.
the word for house is "ie", home is "uchi"
From the Japanese word 'taikun' meaning great lord or prince
The word tycoon comes from the Japanese language. It is derived from the word taikun which means great lord or shogun.
from Japanese Taikun, meaning great Lord or Prince
"Umi no kami" is pronounced: oo-mee no kah-mee.
A Japanese word 'Taikun' meaning Great Lord or Prince. The original may well have been Chinese, connecting the words 'Tai' meaning Great and 'Kiun' meaning Lord.
The term "tycoon" comes from the Japanese word "taikun," which means "great prince" or "great lord." It was used in the 19th century to refer to powerful business leaders or magnates.
"Saku" is not a Chinese word; it is Japanese. In Japanese, it means "To blossom" or "Remembrance of the Lord", depending on the translation you get. I believe that it translates to "Remembrance of the Lord" when used as a name, although I like to use that as a male version while using "To blossom" as the female version.
The Lord's prayer, together with the whole New Tstament, was translated into Japanese by Catholic Jesuit missioaries in 1613, but Christianity was banned in Japan soon after and that translation was lost. Not until the 19th Century was the Bible, together with the Lord's prayer, again translated into Japanese by various Protestant missionaries. The Lord's prayer in Japanese conveys the same meaning to the reader as it does in English, or translated in any other language - God is able to preserve his word to make it understandable to everyone.
This is not a Japanese word.
Japanese does not have a word for "it."
Abbi does not appear to be a Japanese word.
The word "tycoon" comes from Japanese, where it originally meant "great lord" or "shogun." It was later adopted into English to refer to a wealthy and powerful business person.