君子の件, although there're a lot of kanji for "Ken"..
If what you want to say is "The virtuous man's discipline" it's:
君子の拳
Origami is a Japanese word, and I don't know how you would say/write it in Chinese.
Ken is a male's name (only when capitalized) and is a proper noun. "Ken is starting college next year." Ken (noun) means knowledge, understanding, or mental perception. "Relativity is an idea beyond a toddler's ken." It could also mean one's range of sight. "The approaching dusk narrowed our ken." The verb form of ken is rarely used; it's considered archaic. "I ken what you're saying." km - the last point here isn't true. Ken is used in Scotland all of the time. i hear "i ken what your saying" all of the time at work. (Edinburgh)
Ken is a given name for a male person and it is a proper noun. A sentence with the word \'Ken\' in it could be \'Ken goes to work at 8 am and returns home at 6 pm each day\'.
"Went beyond your ken" means it exceeded your knowledge or understanding.
tuss-ken
犬 - inu or ken
i'm assuming by "ken" you mean a name because ken in Japanese has a few meanings such as prefecture etc. names in Japanese are not written in kanji, theyre written in katakana, which are specially designed for English and other foreign languages. you would write it like this: ケン :)
A Japanese province is called "ken."
He be Japanese.
Ken=Blaze Ken=Blaze Ken=Blaze
A Japanese province is called a "ken."
They are called Prefectures, or "Ken" in Japanese.
府県 /fu ken/ mean prefecture in Japanese.
Kenshi (Ken-she)
"Kenjin"ken-jeen
ryu-ken
"Shi no ken" would be pronounced: shee no ken.