you put your hands together like in a praying position and
then nod your head.
Samurai swords and Bow and arrow
No, they used the Yumi Bow.
the rifle
Samurai's are known for their work with swords. There are three general ways of describing swords a short sword (less than 12 inches long) is called a Tanto, and Wakisashi is 12 to 24 inches long and a Katana is longer than 24 inches. Most samurai carried a Katana and a Wakisashi with them. Some samurai also used bow and arrows. Longbowed samurais were very useful.
its easy you keep backing up and shoot with your bow and make units as time goes by and use cards too
Depends... wait... no it doesn't! Samurai had 4 different classes: 1st sentry, second sentry, third sentry, and elite samurai. A spartan would wipe a samurai off his windshield like a bug! But... elite samurai v.s. regular spartan... it would probaly end in a... DRAW SPARTANS HAD shortswords, sheilds, body armor, wallabe spear, and brute strength. SAMURAI HAD kia bow, katana, omsoul club(wooden club with beads), and Honor. WINNER: SPARTAN
Depends. If the Samurai clan in question didn't care about dishonor, I'm sure they used Ninja for the dirty work. Now imagine you're in the honorable Chosokabe clan. Chosokabe were known for their superior bow infantry and bow samurai, and also their honor. If they were known as honorable, I'm sure they did not use Ninja to kill an enemy Daimyo or General, as they would fight for it. Hope it helped. By any chance, did you refer to Shogun 2? Cepeptidon Systems: Well I kind figuired it woulb be considerd extremely dishonorable, but it was a lovely answer, thank you, and no, I don't belive that I referd to Shogun 2, why do you ask?
Samurai
Historically there are no geisha samurai. It was impossible for a woman to become a samurai. Geisha often entertained samurai but were never considered a samurai themselves.
no they are not
In English, it is samurai, singular or plural. This is because it is a class of person.
Samurai Jack - 2001 Samurai Versus Samurai 4-3 was released on: USA: 28 June 2003