"Ku" in Japanese can have different meanings depending on the context. It can mean "nine" when counting, "empty" or "void" when used in Buddhist terminology, or be part of words like "kumo" which means "cloud" or "iku" which means "to go."
"Ku ise" in Yoruba means "well done" or "good job." It is commonly used to praise someone for their efforts or achievements.
The phrase "Nanda yo ta ku ore ha no e mo ke nai" appears to be a distorted or misspelled Japanese sentence. It does not have a clear meaning in Japanese as it seems to be a combination of different words that do not form a coherent sentence.
"Ku ise oo" in Yoruba means "well done" or "good job." It is a phrase used to praise someone for their hard work or achievements.
"Kyuuketsuki" in Japanese is the word for "vampire."
In Yoruba, you can say "αΊΉ ku α»san" to mean good morning.
"Ku gatsu" is a Japanese word and in English it means "September"
クイン /ku in/ would be the Japanese term for that name.
you probably mean haiku, a Japanese form of poetry?
Without seeing the Kanji, I cannot definitively translate the 'ku' you are referring to. 'Ku' can mean several things, including 'nine,' 'ward,' 'section,' and 'pain.'
you probably mean haiku, a Japanese form of poetry?
"Chuugaku" means Middle School
The name Alexis doesn't mean anything in Japanese. It can be written in Japanese as: アレクシス (A-re-ku-shi-su)
バター /ba taa/ and 牛酪 /gyuu ra ku/ both mean 'butter' in Japanese.
慶祝 /kei shu ku/ if you mean its translation; セレブレーション /se re bu ree shon/ if you mean its transliteration into Japanese.
Dore-ku (do-re-e-ku)
The word for "Noir" (I'm guessing you mean the color black by that) in Japanese is Kuroi. くろい ku ro i
テクニック (lit. te ku NI ku).