毛皮だらけ /ke ga WA da ra ke/ or 毛皮一杯 /ke ga WA i-ppai/. Giving it second thoughts, the two mentioned before mean more like 'covered all over with fur' 'full of fair'. Not that they are wrong, but 毛皮のついた /ke ga WA no tsu i ta/ and 湯垢のついた /yu a ke no tsu i ta/ would feel more normal to use, where 'tsuita' as past tense of 付く /tsu ku/ means 'having, having something attached, with' is commonly used in this sense.
Ikari (怒り) : anger, fury (sometimes passion, in compound words)
Okoru (怒る) (same kanji as Ikari) : to get mad (at), to scold (with different kanji could mean to happen' as well)
Doki (怒気) : wrath, anger, the status of being offended or mad at someone.
The Japanese give the sound a cat makes as ゴロゴロ (gorogoro), so you could say ゴロゴロいう (gorogoroiu) for present tense "purring" or ゴロゴロする (gorogorosuru) for "to purr".
You may say 'ke,' written: 毛
a purr word is a word with highly positive coronations. a snarl word is the opposite. or whatever coronations is
The Japanese word for cute is Kawaii, The Japanese word for scared Kowai
Japanese word for surender
fur, her, were, purr,
'Yorokobi' is a Japanese word for joy.
By definition of the word, "purr", no. That is reserved for cats! :)
a purr word is a word with highly positive coronations. a snarl word is the opposite. or whatever coronations is
The kitten nestled closer as it began to purr.
purr
her, purr
purr if furry
No, the word purr is a noun or verb, depending upon usage.An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.Examples:The cat made a soft purr as I stroked her.the noun purr is the direct object of the verb made;the adjective soft describes the noun purr.A contented cat will purr if you scratch its neck.will purr is the verb, what the cat does;the adjective contented describes the noun cat.
in-sep-purr-ah-bull
Check spelling and reask question-not an english word.
purr in Amharic that's easy but y would u wanna no? cats all over the world say purr, no matter what country there from silly! Actually, contrary to the answer above, they don't say purr where every you go. In French, the word is ronroner, in Spanish it is ronronear.
"Complain" is more of a purr word, as it typically conveys a sense of expressing dissatisfaction or discontent in a relatively mild or non-threatening manner. It does not typically invoke strong emotions or aggressive behavior like a snarl word would.
Yes, "purr" is an onomatopoeic word that imitates the sound a cat makes. Alliteration refers to the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words, so "purr" does not demonstrate alliteration.