Their ancient name was "Samurai"; during WWII Japanese or Nipponese.
It is known that Japanese officers studied "Sun Tzus Art of War."
a Japanese rhinoceros beetle. also known as a Japanese horned beetle and kabutmushi.
During WW II Japan was an empire ruled by an emperor, and was therefore known as Imperial Japan. Sometimes the term Nippon is used instead of Japan. The people of Japan were still known as the Japanese, even during WW II.
Could be any of these: 1. Sino-Japanese War 1894 2. Russo-Japanese War 1904 3. 2nd Sino-Japanese War 1930s (sometimes considered part of WWII) 4. WWII-PTO (Pacific Theater of Operations); also sometimes termed the "Pacific War"
It's also known as 'The War of 1812' in Britain.
Yes, and Russia also agreed.
The US was "involved" from 1937 on. This included the sinking of a US Naval vessel, the Panay, by the Japanese. The US also "loaned" ships and war materials to countries at war, known as Lend-Lease. The US actively entered the war on December 7, 1941 when the Japanese attacked the US in Hawaii.
The Great War or The War to End All Wars
No, the Nuremberg trials were specifically for prosecuting German war criminals. Japanese war criminals were tried separately in the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, also known as the Tokyo trials, which held Japanese individuals accountable for their actions during World War II.
The Japanese Raccoon Dog, also known as tanuki in Japanese, is a subspecies of the Asian raccoon dog.
"War" is not a Japanese word. In Japanese, "war" is 戦争 (sensou).
The Japanese samurai were known to commit ritual suicide, or seppuku, when defeated to avoid disgrace at the hands of enemies. During World War II, this tradition expanded to other Japanese soldiers.