The Japanese word æ‘ (mura) is commonly used to mean 'village'.
Example: å½¼ã¯ä¹å·žã®å°ã•ãªæ‘ã«ä½ã‚“ã§ã„ã‚‹ (kare wa kyuushuu no chiisana mura ni sundeiru) - "He lives in a small village in Kyushu."
It depends on what town you mean. But the Japanese word for town or village is mura.
Kiyokawa-mura in Kanagawa Funahashi-mura in Toyama Chibu-mura in Shimane
It is 'mura.'
"Town" in Japanese is 'machi,' written: 町 'Mura' can be used to refer to villages, written: 村
Depending on context: inaka, kotan, mura, sato, shuuraku
In romaji: mura In hiragana: むら In kanji: 村
é‡‘ã®æ‘ (kin no mura) means 'golden village' in Japanese.
Great song. They're Japanese onomatopoeia: Chu chu (kisses) Muni muni (fondling) Mura mura (arousal) Purin purin (jiggly) Boron (whipping "it" out) Nururu (slipping) Rerorero (licking) The rest is in the lyrics!
Takashi Kitamura has written: 'Takamatsuzuka to Kitora' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Japanese Mural painting and decoration, Kitora Tomb (Asuka-mura, Japan), Mural painting and decoration, Japanese, Takamatsuzuka Tomb (Asuka-mura, Japan)
村 (mura) For pronunciation read this site http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~bestor/easy_pronunciation.htm
村 /mu ra/ means 'village' and 庭 /ni wa/ means 'garden'. So 村の庭 (mura no niwa) would mean village's garden.
Corinna Mura was born in 1909.