Banzai means 'Hurray!' but I'm not sure about the meaning for 'hyndai'.
soushiki
bonsai. banzai. lanai. samurai.
There are only a few: aisle, aisles in English, and words originally in other languages such as banzai, bonsai, samurai (Japanese), assegai (Portuguese, from Arabic-African).
Some Japanese words that start with the letter "N" include "Neko" (猫), meaning "cat," "Nihon" (日本), which means "Japan," and "Naru" (なる), meaning "to become." Additionally, "Natsu" (夏) translates to "summer," and "Ningen" (人間) means "human." These words showcase a variety of meanings and contexts in the Japanese language.
The name tsutsugamushi is derived from two Japanese words: tsutsuga, meaning something small and dangerous, and mushi, meaning creature.
Both words come from Japanese. According to the online dictionary Babylon their meaning is:kimono: n. long Japanese robe which is worn by both men and women; dressing gown, long robe which is fastened with a beltfuton: n. type of Japanese fold-out sofa bed; type of Japanese mattress
banzai blaze blitz blizzard brazen breeze bronze buzz buzzard embezzle whizzbang zebra
The Japanese
A Japanese word 'Taikun' meaning Great Lord or Prince. The original may well have been Chinese, connecting the words 'Tai' meaning Great and 'Kiun' meaning Lord.
I know the red word is the Japanese which was romanized as "Naruto." Not sure of the meaning of the white.
There are some Japanese words that phonetically sound the same such as "biiru" which means "beer". However the flip side is that most words like that are is because of their English meanings. As a side note there are a few names that I heard of while living in Japan that are similar in sound, but not meaning. Japanese: Erika, Mei Western: Erica, May Not sure how much help this is, but I hope I helped a little.
It means 'paper folding', from 'ori' - 'folding', and 'kami' - 'paper'. (kami becomes gami here, some words in Japanese change like this when formed into a compound word)