It is another way of saying `I love you`
(First way is `daisuki`)
I belive Shinigami Or close to that is 'angel of death'
The easiest way I believe would be to just use crazy. "Kuru teru" (pronounciation - after the kuru it's a sharp end and no stretching) "Atama ga kuru teru" crazy in the head <the head is crazy> "Atama ga okashi" weird in the head <literal translation - the head is weird>
douzo ohairi kudasai is often used by shop keepers if customers are unsure whether to go into a shop or not but i suspect that "Douzo otamae shi kudasai" if you heard it write is osakaben (osaka dialect) for the same
It would be "pinku no shi" or "momoiro no shi"
騎士道 /ki shi dou/ is an exact equivalent for 'chivalry' in Japanese, literally meaning 'the way of knight'.
it means 'i love you' in Japanese
To say "i love you" in japanese: ai shi teru Ah-shee-tare- oo
"I love you" in Japanese is pronounced as "愛してる (ai shiteru)" or "大好きだよ (daisuki da yo)."
"Ai" is the Japanese word for love, but there are other words that tend to be used in phrases. For example, "I love you" is "aishiteru". "Daisuki" is sometimes also used for love, but literally, it just translates to "great like"; in other words, really liking something.
Well kimi is one way of saying "you". wo is a particle indicating the object of a verb. aishi teru is the present progressive of the verb ai suru, which is one way of saying "love". that is actually a shortening of it. the proper way is ai shi te iru. that sentence leaves off the subject. [watashi wa] kimi wo aishi teru=i love you. Sorry. I can see why you did what you did. I had to leave spaces to make it work.
The cast of Bokura no ai no kanade - 2008 includes: Tsuyoshi Hayata Teru Toko Masato Uchiyama
i love you
Ai to shi o mitsumete - 1964 was released on: Japan: 19 September 1964 USA: October 1965
Ai to shi no kiroku - 1966 was released on: Japan: 17 September 1966 USA: May 1967 Estonia: 1972
"Shi to ai."
The cast of Tai Bei ai qing gu shi - 1994 includes: Carrie Ng
Zirong. has written: 'Duo ai qi shi' 'Ye, qing ai wo'