"Mouichidou" (more formal) pronounced: moe-ee-chee-doe
"Mouikkai" (more casual):
pronounced: moe-ee(!)'kai (where the apostrophe signals a sudden break)
mou ichido 'mou' means 'again', or already, and 'ichido' means 'once' I believe. 'ichido' comes from the Japanese word for one, 'ichi'. 'mou ichido' literally means 'once more' or 'once again', but I suppose it can be used as 'one more'
Hod.
再び
khoob
mou ichido itte kudasai.
it's : splendide , formidable
'Itsuka mata aimasu ka?'.
"once in a blue moon" means not very often It means periodically, or we can say once in a long length of time. Again we can say, rarely. Although as I remember the saying, it goes, "Once in a blue moon." Once again it means rarely.
Sushi is a luxury for most Japanese, albeit an affordable one. Families I am familiar with might eat sushi once a month. If your question means "Is sushi a food most Japanese eat?," the answer would be "yes," but, again, not so often as, say, cooked fish and rice.
ichido means "once", so like if you want to say I have been there once, you would say : " Ichido itta koto ga aru."
I read it at Kirisuto once. A clothing company I think uses kurusso.
I am a Japanese high school student. High school in Japanese is Koukou. But it is pronounced Kohkoh, long vowels in Japanese are written with the first sound then a う (translates into a u sound) people writing it write the u and this gives the wrong idea, so once again it is said kohkoh like as in "oh, i didn't know that" that o sound