banzai

English

Etymology

From Japanese 万歳 (banzai, long live..., huzzah, hurrah), from Middle Chinese 萬歲 (mjòn-sjwèi), from Old Chinese 萬歲 (*mans s-qʷʰats, 10,000 years [of life]”, i.e. “immortality), from (10,000) (year (of age)).

Compare Mandarin 萬歲万岁 (wànsùi).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbɑːnˈzaɪ/, /ˈbænˈzaɪ/
  • Hyphenation: ban‧zai

Adjective

banzai (comparative more banzai, superlative most banzai)

  1. Thrill-seeking; wild.
    • 1991, Cycle World: Volume 30
      Still, the Seca II isn't meant to be a racebike, and power is adequate for all but the most banzai backroad blitzing.

Derived terms

  • banzai board
  • banzai charge
  • banzai crazy
  • Banzai pipeline
  • go banzai

Interjection

banzai

  1. A cry or cheer of enthusiasm, or to celebrate victory.

Translations

Noun

banzai (plural banzais)

  1. A cry or cheer of "banzai", to express enthusiasm or celebrate victory.

Anagrams


Indonesian

Etymology

From Japanese 万歳 (banzai, long live..., huzzah, hurrah), from Middle Chinese 萬歲 (mjòn-sjwèi), from Old Chinese 萬歲 (*mans s-qʷʰats, 10,000 years [of life]”, i.e. “immortality), from (10,000) (year (of age)).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ban.zai/
  • Hyphenation: ban‧zai

Noun

  1. A cry or cheer of "banzai", to express enthusiasm or celebrate victory.
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