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Kurenai Yuhi, a fictional character from the manga series Naruto. Tsubasa Kurenai, a fictional character from the manga series Ranma ½. Kurenai, the main character of the video game Red Ninja: End Of Honor. Kurenai, a faction of Broken Draenei in the computer game World of Warcraft. Maria Kurenai, a character from the manga series Vampire Knight.
"Kurenai" (紅, literally "crimson") is a song by Japanese heavy metal band X Japan, written by Yoshiki. One of the band's oldest songs, they have been performing "Kurenai" since 1985, and several versions have been released, most significantly as their major-label debut single on September 1, 1989.
Kenkyusha's New English-Japanese Dictionary and Japanese-English Dictionary English-Japanese Dictionary 7th edition and Japanese-English Dictionary 5th edition iOS version (研究社新英和(第7版)和英(第5版)中辞典 音声付き) [6] Version 2.0.1 (2009-07-07, iOS 3.0 and later) Version 2.0.2 (2009-09-02) Version 2.0.3 (2009-11-02)
Crimson is set in 1935 Japan, [5] a time of fierce governmental oppression of socialist and communist movements. The Japan Proletarian Writers Alliance, which Sata and her husband Tsurujirō Kubokawa had belonged to, had dissolved the previous year, [5] the Japanese Communist Party had already been outlawed in 1932.
First, it will be useful to introduce some key Japanese terms for dictionaries and collation (ordering of entry words) that the following discussion will be using.. The Wiktionary uses the English word dictionary to define a few synonyms including lexicon, wordbook, vocabulary, thesaurus, and translating dictionary.
The Nippo Jisho (日葡辞書, literally the "Japanese–Portuguese Dictionary") or Vocabulario da Lingoa de Iapam (Vocabulário da Língua do Japão in modern Portuguese; "Vocabulary of the Language of Japan" in English) is a Japanese-to-Portuguese dictionary compiled by Jesuit missionaries and published in Nagasaki, Japan, in 1603.
Kure-nai (Japanese: 紅, "Crimson") is a Japanese light novel series by Kentarō Katayama, with illustrations by Yamato Yamamoto.A manga adaptation started serialization in the first issue of Jump Square magazine and had its last chapter published in the June 2012 issue. [1]
English glosses are one of the most notable differences between the Nihongo daijiten and other general-purpose Japanese dictionaries (Kōjien, Daijirin, Daijisen, etc.)..). Since the Nihongo daijiten gives brief English annotations rather than translation equivalents, it is not an actual Japanese-English bilingual dictionary, but it is useful as an all-in-one dicti