O ushi or 雄牛
Generally "牛" (ushi), though that refers to cattle of either sex, or more specifically, "牡牛" (oushi); the latter refers specifically to male cattle.
You may say 'oushi,' written: 牡牛
lock jaw is a myth and what you are saying is that they can take lots of pain while it holds on and the bull dog (holds onto to bull and wont let go even though it smashes to the floor) this is where it comes from and the Japanese akita isn't part bull dog so no it doesn't
No, countries do it all the time. Pit Bull Terriers are illegal in the UK, as are Japanese Tosas.
It is referred to as a "Bull."It is referred to as a "Bull."It is referred to as a "Bull."It is referred to as a "Bull."It is referred to as a "Bull."It is referred to as a "Bull."
a bull, yes...a bull shark, no
bull run bull run bull run bull fun bull run
Red Bull, Chicago Bulls, Bull Cuts, Bull Rings, and Bull ****.
They kill it. The death of the bull is the climax of the bull fight.
If you mean Onigiri then It can mean 2 things what I know. Onigiri = Rice Ball, A famous Japanese food thingy. Onigiri = Demon Bull, Zoro from one piece's attack, maybe it's badly translated but still :) Hope that gave you your answer!
A bull. Or, if you want to be more specific, a mature bull. Otherwise, just "a bull" works just fine.
no because their can not be what bull.what bull is not also a sentence