Actually, BONSAI means potted plant that is unnaturally dwarfed. The word you are reffering to is BANZAI, which means 10,000 years. It is just a thing that they say when they engage in combat, commit seppuku, etc. They want the Japanese empire to last 10,000 years.
Bull Run (Manassas) is the first credited use of the Rebel Yell.
Probably, their battle cry was "Banzai"; the Japanese version of the Confederate's "Rebel Yell" (US Civil War 1861-1865).
Charge! The Rebel Yell!
Completely different war. you're thinking of WW1.
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The short answer: they didn't. They did use the word "banzai" (which may sound somewhat similar to those who don't speak Japanese. This means "ten thousand years" and is part of a longer phrase along the lines of "ten thousand years to the Emperor." The word bonsai is very often mispronounced in English. It should sound something like the French word "bonne" and the English word "sigh" together. I hope this answers your question. :-)
Their battle cry was, "Banzai!", a Japanese version of the, "Rebel Yell" from the Confederates during the US Civil War (1861-1865).
You may use the word 'sakebu.'
get a Japanese fighter plane, learn the bushido code, then while in the airplane yell out gibberish when your about to crash into whatever, well technically they didn't yell gibberish, yell "Hissatsu" instead.
She had to yell to be heard over the noise of the crowd.
Do you mean, their version of the "Rebel Yell"? If so, it was "Banzai."
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Green-go!
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Bull Run (Manassas) is the first credited use of the Rebel Yell.
Probably, their battle cry was "Banzai"; the Japanese version of the Confederate's "Rebel Yell" (US Civil War 1861-1865).