You might be thinking of 柔道 (judo) literally soft, gentle way. Jujitsu would mean soft, gentle method - which is nearly the same meaning. Aikido would be the "way of the suitable spirit." I want to remember something using 安 (an) which means easy, so easy way might be 安道 but this would also mean "the way of cheapness" which isn't so suitable. Not for a sport anyway.
I don't believe "jami" is a real word in Japanese, however, "jama" means "an obstruction" or refers to something that's "in the way."
It means flower in japanese though that's not how you spell it. It's the english way of spelling it. Do you watch wolf's rain too?
Moushikashite usually means something along the lines of "Don't tell me..." or "How can this be?" I'm not certain if there's a more direct translation or not.
"Number one grandson" in Japanese would be "ichiban no mago." It's pronounced: ee-chee-bon no mah-go.
ja mata in Japanese means see you later.
get yourself a Japanese girlfriend
Glide would be a word that means "to move in an easy way."
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the game name is Judo it is a Japanese gam meaning gentle way.
The easy way means doing something in the least difficult way or a short cut.
There is no easy way to find the GS Ball. You can ONLY get it by capturing all of the 251 Pokemon and talking to Professor Elm, or have the Japanese Version.
The Japanese word 'sayonara' means 'goodbye or farewell' in Japanese. This phrase originated from 1875 in Japan. It is literally translated as "if it is to be that way" from sayo and "that way" plus nara "if".
In Japanese, 騎士道 (kishidou) is "chivalry" and it literally means "the way of knights."
よう means style/way/likeness/state
It means 'galaxy,' or 'milky way,' and is written: 銀河
It means in the order of how it happened.
hi in japanese means yes but hi in english means hello in a informal way ;D