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Sub Brand Notes Honda (1946–present) Acura: Isuzu (1853–present; spun off from IHI in 1916) Mazda (1920–present) (5% Toyota) Following are the former sub brands of Mazda: Autorama Autozam ɛ̃nfini Eunos Xedos: Mitsubishi (1873–1950; 1964–present) Nissan (formerly Datsun) (1933–present) Infiniti (1989–present)
This is a list of automobiles produced for the general public in the Japanese market. They are listed in chronological order from when each model began its model year. If a model did not have continuous production, it is listed again on the model year production resumed. Concept cars and submodels are not listed unless they are themselves notable.
Wikipedia categories named after vehicle manufacturing companies of Japan (13 C) Pages in category "Car manufacturers of Japan" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total.
All American Racers; AM General; Anteros Coachworks; Aptera; Arcimoto; Autocar; Alpha; Bremach; Bollinger; Callaway; Canoo; Czinger; DeLorean; Drako; Detroit Electric ...
[1] Smaller than a word is a morpheme, the building block from which marketing names such as "Lumina" are formed. [3] One example is how NameLab used the prefix "Acu" to help form "Acura." [4] The term "In-capping" involves joining and capitalizing multiple words and describes the name NameLab. [2] It worked for clients such as AutoZone.
Heavily dominated by Audis and Kias, CR’s list of vehicles that are selling for well above sticker price includes Toyota’s GR86, the company’s “2 plus 2” sports car jointly developed ...
All-wheel-drive luxury crossover sedan marketed in Japan and North America. Oldest Toyota passenger car nameplate still in use. Hybrid powertrain is standard. Mirai: 2014 JPD20: 2020 Global Fuel-cell/hydrogen executive sedan. Prius: 1997 XW60: 2022 Global Hybrid/plug-in hybrid compact liftback (C-segment). The first mass-marketed hybrid ...
Japanese cars became popular with British buyers in the early 1970s, with Nissan's Datsun badged cars (the Nissan brand was not used on British registered models until 1983) proving especially popular and earning a reputation in Britain for their reliability and low running costs, although rust was a major problem. Exports were successful ...