Примери за използване на Japanese translation на Английски и техните преводи на Български
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Medicine
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
Japanese translation.
Professional Japanese Translation.
Japanese translation.
Online Bulgarian Japanese translation.
Japanese translation updated.
There's also a partial Japanese translation.
Old Japanese translation.
I read two books in Japanese translation.
Japanese translation requires a lot of skill.
Version 2.771: Japanese translation added.
Japanese translation. Transaction groups can be collapsed.
Version 3.071: Japanese translation added;
(Laughter) And something… good luck with that one in the Japanese translation room.
Added Japanese translation.
Languages: added German,French, and Japanese translations.
Fixed Japanese translation.
There is also a Korean and Japanese translation.
English- Japanese Translation list.
You know, the ones that turned to the right,there are some of those in the Japanese translation.
Updated Japanese translation.
Check out the JETRO website(Japan External Trade Organisation) for extensive information on doing business with Japan and, of course,contact EVS Translations for all your Japanese to English and English to Japanese translation and interpreting needs.
Another Japanese translation!
The Japanese translation of bonsai means“planted in a container”.
Japanese(ja)- the Japanese translation team.
The word kenpō is a Japanese translation of the Chinese word"quánfǎ.
The book he read at this stage of his education which he found most attractive was a Japanese translation of Salmon's A treatise on conic sections.
Updated Japanese translation by Hiroki Inagaki.
The Japanese translation is also completed, but due to the large font files, it would cause a larger download for other players and it also requires a computer with higher specs.
One example of a non-Buddhist mondō is the Sokuratesu-no-mondō, the Japanese translation of the"Socratic method", whereby Socrates asked his students questions in order to elicit the innate truth from assumed facts.