Examples of using "Japońskiego" in a sentence and their english translations:
- I am learning Japanese.
- I'm learning Japanese.
I'm a Japanese teacher.
Have you tried Japanese beer?
- I am learning Japanese.
- I am studying Japanese.
I want to learn Japanese.
I have to study Japanese.
Why didn't you buy a Japanese car?
You have to study Japanese harder.
Did he learn Japanese as well?
- Is English more difficult than Japanese?
- Is English harder than Japanese?
He is staying here with a view to learning Japanese.
- You'll soon get used to eating Japanese food.
- You will soon get used to eating Japanese food.
No language is as lovely as Japanese.
We translated the novel from Japanese into English.
- You'll soon get used to eating Japanese food.
- You will soon get used to eating Japanese food.
Did you soon get used to Japanese food?
The foreigner didn't know Japanese at all.
It is difficult for a foreigner to study Japanese.
Mary has finished her Japanese assignment.
The foreigner soon got used to Japanese food.
- She came to Japan for the purpose of studying Japanese.
- She came to Japan to study Japanese.
Is English harder than Japanese?
Did he learn Japanese as well?
- Mr. Oh came to Japan to study Japanese.
- Mr. Wang came to Japan to study Japanese.
I can't speak Japanese.
Tom came to Japan to study Japanese.
I sat outside and studied Japanese.
From that day on, we helped him learn Japanese.
The climate of New Zealand is similar to that of Japan.
- It is forty years since I began studying Japanese.
- It's been forty years since I began to study Japanese.
She translated the letter from Japanese into French.
If it weren't for the iPhone, I wouldn't be able to learn Japanese.
Mary wants to learn Japanese, that's why she isn't here.
- Having studied Japanese, Jenny had no trouble in Japan.
- Since Jenny had studied Japanese, she had no trouble in Japan.
During his seven years in Japan, he studied Japanese in earnest.
"I'd like to learn Japanese, but I don't fancy studying the script." "Then you should give up your plan to learn Japanese, here and now."
The dog ate a watch and a Japanese fan.
My level of Japanese is weak, so I can't write well.
Tom has to learn Japanese because he's going to Japan next year.
The foreigner soon got used to Japanese food.
One of the reasons Twitter is popular in Japan is a characteristic of Japanese itself: Japanese uses ideograms which enable it to convey more information in just 140 characters than other languages, not counting Chinese. Incidentally, the Japanese version of this sentence is written with exactly 140 characters. How many characters does it take in other languages?