Yaru is an Egyptian god. Yaru is a god for afterlife.
Yaru Zheng has written: 'Qing gan yu zhi du' -- subject(s): Mothers, Family, History
Ore ga Yaranakya Dare ga Yaru was created on 1995-11-21.
It is the volitional form of the verb "yaru," meaning "to do."
There are a few common words for the verb "to do" in Japanese, among them 'suru' and 'yaru.'
vera yaru namma thalaivar kalainger tha 1,76,00000000000000000
feed, as in to give food to an animal: esa wo yaru as to give food to a person: tabesaseru
I think you may have meant 'koroshite yaru,' which could be translated as "I'll kill you!" in English -- certainly not something you'd want to say to anybody.
"Driven" as in "motivated" can be expressed with phrase 'yaru ki ga aru,' written: やる気がある
You can indicate that modal verb by adding べき /be ki/ at the end of the plain/positive form of a verb. Yaru (to do) + beki (must/should) = Yarubeki (must do).You can also inflect the nai-form (negative stem) of a verb by adding 'nakya naranai' or most commonly and in short 'nakya' alone, like:Yaru (to do) => Yaranai ( will/do/does/etc not do) => minus nai=> Yara (: negative stem of Yaru) + nakya = Yaranakya (must do, have to do)
y: yaru, which is the Egyptian fields of the after life and w: wabet, the place where the purification and mummification rites took place w: white nile This website will help! http:/www.egyptartsite.com/glossary.html
"Yaru ka? Debu-san." This was the closest I could find. I think it literally means "You wanna piece of me? Fatty." But I don't trust myself completely with Japanese. So it may not be that acccurate. Needless to say, I tried my best.
あなたをおぼれさせて、殺して、サメに食わせてやる! anatawo oboresasete, koroshite, same ni kuwasete yaru!