If you're referring to "sound" as in the body of water, then you may say 'chi no kaikyou,' written: 血の海峡
bloody moon
chimajire - "mixed in blood"
YuuYake夕焼け
Sudden Bloody Dust Dog
The Japanese language no longer has the sound 'yi' so Yin does not mean anything in Japanese.
yes daa sorry i sound mean
jon cana jon cana jobbie jobbie
the Japanese word for a cat sound is nya nyaa~! I'm a kitty nyaa~!
well technically this is a stpid imature pathetic question askedby a stupid immature little rat who wants to know about BLOODY SOUND SENSORS AND MEASURING LOUD BLOODY ANALOUGE METERS!
"no" in Japanese is "iie". Hold the I sound longer than you normally would. This is because "ie" is also a Japanese word, but the I sound but means house instead of no if you don't hold the I sound very long.
kabochya nezumi, never heard of one but i imagine its bloody big
according to www.translate.google.com, the translation of bloody from English to Japanese is: 血なまぐさいChimamireIt also means bloodstained.Put "na" or "no" after it if you want to make it an adjective, ex. "chimamire na kokoro" = "bloodstained heart".