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.
jon cana jon cana jobbie jobbie
yes daa sorry i sound mean
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.
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".
kabochya nezumi, never heard of one but i imagine its bloody big