In Japanese, "student" is translated as "学生 (gakusei)".
"Gakusei desu ka?" in Japanese translates to "Are you a student?" in English.
"Hattori" is a Japanese surname that is derived from the place name Hattori, which means "clothing store" in Japanese. It can also refer to the historical figure Hattori Hanzo, a famous ninja in Japanese history.
The singular possessive form of "student" is "student's."
The possessive form of the noun phrase 'the lunch of the student' is: the student's lunch.
In Japanese, "student" is translated as "学生 (gakusei)".
If a Hungarian teacher and Japanese student are making out, this is morally wrong. It is actually against the professional ethics for a teacher to be involved with a student in such a relationship.?æ
My Japanese student (fluent speaker) doesn't know it.
In Japanese, it means Student.
Gakusei is the Japanese word for student
I believe in February.
新入生 Shin'nyūsei
Here is "koko." It's pronounced: koh-koh.
Well, it depends on what your status is. If you are younger, or of lower status than the student, you would call him or her 'senpai.'
You may use 学生 (gakusei) to mean student, or 生徒 (seito) to mean student/pupil.
japanese. it doesn't matter who they meet, they're still a lot like japanses people.
"Gakusei desu ka?" in Japanese translates to "Are you a student?" in English.