English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am serious. I do not want to use the Janpaeese alphabet because I do not know how to read that alphabet. NO ONLINE TRANSLATORS. They do not work properly. It's a long story about how I need to know how to say it in Japaneese, but please. Answer properly!

2006-12-08 11:17:53 · 10 answers · asked by Addicted To Abercrombie & Fitch 2 in Society & Culture Languages

10 answers

Criken

2006-12-08 11:20:13 · answer #1 · answered by Jon W 5 · 0 4

People in Japan refer to "niwatori" to the live chicken. If you're in a restaurant you order for "toriniku" which literally means "bird meat". Also, most children and some grownups also refer to it as simply -Chikin-, japanese version of the english word Chicken.

2006-12-08 14:23:32 · answer #2 · answered by Patricia J 3 · 4 0

Tori. That is the word for chicken.
And Japanese use 3 different alphabets: Katakana, Hiragana, and Kanji (Imported Chinese characters).
Anything else?

2006-12-08 11:22:29 · answer #3 · answered by snipertkc 3 · 1 1

Oishi

2006-12-08 11:33:35 · answer #4 · answered by lolipop 3 · 0 0

(a) chicken is "niwatori" in Japanese.
chicken (meat) is "tori-niku", "kei-niku" or "niwatori no niku" in Japanese. "niku" means meat.

tori-niku -- most commonly used
kei-niku -- cooks and sellers often use. sounds jargon a bit.
niwatori no niku -- tori-niku literally means bird meat. so we use it to tell chicken meat from other bird one.

In the kansai area of Japan, we call chicken meat "kashiwa".

2006-12-10 01:05:51 · answer #5 · answered by Black Dog 4 · 0 0

Tori is just "bird" and "oishi" is "delicious", so disregard those answers.

If you mean chicken meat then it is "teiniku". Plain ol' chicken can be niwatori (literally: "garden bird") or "chikin".

2006-12-08 11:53:59 · answer #6 · answered by Belie 7 · 0 1

baka bosu =bak-a boo-sue

2006-12-08 11:20:16 · answer #7 · answered by ashlei 3 · 0 4

good googly moogly, that thang is juicy

2006-12-08 11:19:50 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

FERGILICIOUS DEFINITION MAKES THEM BOYZ GO LOCO

2006-12-08 11:19:55 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

nekcihc

2006-12-08 11:20:42 · answer #10 · answered by ? 6 · 0 5

fedest.com, questions and answers