It is sometimes referred to as Hand Tapping.
Well, a bamboo tattoo could be a tattoo of bamboo on the skin, but I think you are probably referring to the old way of tattooing with sharpened bamboo. The word tattoo comes from the Polynesian word tatau, which actually means to tap repeatedly. Still used in these modern times, but not so much, the process involved fixing a sharpened bamboo point to a flexible bamboo piece that was then tapped repeatedly with yet another piece of bamboo. This same style was used in other places with anything that could be shaped into a point, even rose thorns.
Irezumi is a Japanese word that refers to the process of tattooing rather than a pattern on the skin If you go and google the master Horiyoshi III or Shige, they are a couple of the best in the world at this type of tattooing
If you are referring to the language in which the word bamboo derived from, it is from the Malaysian word mambu.
There is no abstract noun for the concrete noun 'bamboo', a word for a physical plant, a word for a physical substance.
Bambú is the Spanish word for bamboo.
Through a process of connecting Bamboo together with rope called "lashing"
"Take (竹)" is for bamboo. "Takenoko (竹の子)" is for a bamboo shoot.
Bamboo is " Bash" ( a pronounced as "a" in the word 'father')
This flooring material is actually bamboo. There's a bamboo windbreak on the south side of the garden.
Bamboo in Indonesian writing is bambu.
Koalas' diets consist mostly of bamboo.
The easiest way to sign "bamboo" in ASL is to fingerspell the word. There is not one sign for that particular word.