Bone in Japanese kanji looks like this. Bone: 骨 Bone in Japanese is pronounced like this. Honei
Lina can't be spelled in kanji. The syllable 'Li' does not exist in original Japanese syllabary, for which kanji is used. Instead it only can be written in 'katakana' as リーナ /rii na/.
Fate in Japanese is 'unmei'. written in kanji ; 運命
In Kanji it's Kazan.
櫻.
The kanji for love in Japanese is 愛.
Kanji is a type language in Japan. It is Japanese writing.
There is no Kanji for "madsam."
There is no single kanji meaning friendship in Japanese.
There's 邪悪な. Jaaku na. That's the most literal. Also, there's "neikan" (sorry, I don't know that in kanji), and UIKIDDO (ウィキッド). UIKIDDO is used in the name of the American musical "Wicked" in Japan.
Kayla cannot be written in Japanese kanji because (1) it isn't a Japanese word, and (2) there is no such sound as "l" in Japanese.
We write it as 鯉[koi] in kanji in Japanese.
The Kanji for "water" is 水
Bone in Japanese kanji looks like this. Bone: 骨 Bone in Japanese is pronounced like this. Honei
The Japanese started using kanji characters around the 5th century AD when they were introduced from China. Kanji became an essential part of the Japanese writing system, used alongside hiragana and katakana scripts.
Kanji characters. Kanji characters are logographic characters that represent whole words or ideas in the Japanese writing system.
Winter means "Kanji" in Japanese.