チョコレート (cho ko ree to) is Japanese borrowed word for chocolate; however お菓子(o ka shi) is the general Japanese word for sweets, confections.
[ee = elongated 'e' sound]
It is 'chokoreeto.'
choko
shokora or chokore-to Chocolate originated in the Americas, so "chocolate" is a loanword in Japanese. チョコレート chokorēto, often abbreviated to just チョコ choko, is most commonly seen. 猪口冷糖 chokoreitou is the word phonetically adapted into kanji (Chinese characters), literally meaning "small cup, cold, sugar". This is rare however.
Saku Saku are adorable panda-shaped cookies that are available in strawberry or chocolate. Japanese people love them because they're cute and delicious.
In Japanese, you would say "彼にチョコレートをくれてありがとう" pronounced as "kare ni chokoreeto o kurete arigatou." This phrase translates to "thank you for giving him a chocolate" in English. The word order in Japanese is different from English, with the recipient coming before the object.
Chocolate is 'chokoreeto' in Japanese.
It is 'chokoreeto.'
choko
チョコレート
Chocolate in Japanese is チョコレート (chokore-to) or even just チョコ (choko).
chokoreito no akachan
It stays "chocolate", but is often shortened to "choco."
chocolate chewing gum (japanese only)
Honmei choco means true feeling chocolate. A woman will give this chocolate to the man she has feelings for on Valentine's day.
OF COURSE! For me living in Tokyo, and being a Japanese, I know for sure there are chocolats there!
Yes its a brownie, it came from the Japanese show in UNK96.
candyfloss, chocolate banana,takoyaki are some.