Banzai is already a Japanese word. No translate is needed.
Banzai! (I think)
"Hooray" in Japanese can be translated as "γγ£γ" (yatta) or "δΈζ³" (banzai).
Banzai means 'Hurray!' but I'm not sure about the meaning for 'hyndai'.
Tora Tora Bonzai
Banzai
Bansai is a Japanese name. If you mean 'banzai' it means 'priase be...' , 'hurray' etc.
The phrase 'long live the Emperor' is天皇陛下万歳 (tennou heika banzai) in Japanese. This literally means '10,000 years (of life) for His Majesty the Emperor'. The shorter version 万歳 (banzai) is more common.
"Banzai" is a Japanese battle cry that translates "ten thousand years!". Bayonet is a heavy knife with an attachment to mount it to the end of a rifle.
Do you mean, their version of the "Rebel Yell"? If so, it was "Banzai."
During World War 2, the suicidal Japanese attackers shouted "Tenohueka.....BANZAI!" This meant "May the emperor live thousands of years". They shouted this right as they charged the enemy infantry. According to Banzai Skydiver, Banzai is the Japanese, "hurrah!" It originated during the Chinese Chin Dynasty. It was pronouced, "Wan-sui." It was popular as a happy gesture. It spread across Asia and was distorted during WII by the famous suicidal attacks. Now it is equated to danger and extreme sports.
for full success, and to deny capture of allied forces during WWII
Their battle cry was, "Banzai!", a Japanese version of the, "Rebel Yell" from the Confederates during the US Civil War (1861-1865).