I always have... No problems. I am a 5 year sushi chef.
Soku Dakishimete was created on 2006-06-03.
The Adventures of Chuck and Friends - 2010 Attack of the 50-Foot Chuck Soku-Kun 1-24 was released on: USA: 3 June 2011
The phrase "aku soku zan" in Japanese culture and history means "swift as the wind, silent as a forest, fierce as fire, and immovable as a mountain." It is a motto associated with the samurai warrior code of conduct, emphasizing the importance of agility, stealth, strength, and resilience in facing challenges. This phrase symbolizes the virtues of a warrior and the mindset needed to overcome obstacles with determination and skill.
The term "Saya" (Swift Arrow) in Japanese can be written as 矢 (ya), which means "arrow." However, if you are specifically referring to "Swift Arrow," the word for "swift" can be represented by 速 (soku) or 早 (haya). Therefore, a possible combination for "Swift Arrow" could be 速矢 (sokuya) or 早矢 (hayaya), depending on the context.
(Someone please fill in for IaMP for me)In SWR and Soku, when you customize your deck you have "skill cards".Therefore, when you add skill cards to the deck it either adds new special attacks, (and replaces the former; for example Cirno's default 623B/C is "Freeze Touch Me". Should you activate a skillcard with 623b/c as its configuration Cirno will perform that attack rather than the default. Then again, most of her 623 attacks are sorta awkward for comboing)Or it will make stronger/change slightly the attack you already have if it is the same attack. 4 levels max.To "use" the skillcard you switch to the card in your deck during battle (by default for 1P it is the "S" key, or Z+X) and then cast it by pressing D or X+C.Sometimes the attack will be performed as you cast it if there is a change. (Only in Soku.)Notes:Suwako is a very, very strange exception to the casting of skill cards.You must know whether they can be activated in air, on the ground, underground, or in crouching state.Take the time to learn it.
"Rapido" is an Italian equivalent of "fast."Specifically, the word is the masculine singular form of an Italian adjective. The pronunciation is "RAH-pee-doh." The feminine singular form, "rapida," is pronounced "RAH-pee-dah."