biking n. “Biking” is one of many Japanese words that they’ve taken from English. It means “all-you-can-eat,” pretty much the same as “tabehodai,” the proper Japanese words for such culinary indulgence. [JapaneseJapanFood & Drink] [full cite] (Apr. 29, 2004)
biking n. Examples are バイキング which sounds like biking. However it is from the word Viking and means smorgasbord. [JapaneseJapanFood & Drink] [full cite] (Apr. 29, 2004)
biking n. “Whah? The dinner was biking?” We were obviously confused. “Yes, biking style.” And it is here that we must explain, dear reader, one of the many things which makes communication with the Japanese difficult. Much like the constant confusion between “l” and “r”, there is often no difference between “v” and “b” to the Japanese. So we slowly came to realize that a buffet dinner is considered to be a meal eaten “viking” style. [JapaneseJapanFood & Drink] [full cite] (Apr. 29, 2004)
BL n. Other examples of their specialized vocabulary include “yaoi” and “boizu rabu” (i.e., boy’s love, sometimes abbreviated BL). Yaoi applies when the progagonist in a manga or novel makes a reappearance in a spin-off or sequel. BL refers to an original work. [English-derivedJapaneseAcronym] [full cite] (Jul. 2, 2005)
boizu rabu n. Other examples of their specialized vocabulary include “yaoi” and “boizu rabu” (i.e., boy’s love, sometimes abbreviated BL). Yaoi applies when the progagonist in a manga or novel makes a reappearance in a spin-off or sequel. BL refers to an original work. [English-derivedJapanese] [full cite] (Jul. 2, 2005)
bokashi n. Bokashi buckets: bokashi is the Japanese word for fermented organic matter, and this system is unusual because it involves both cooked and uncooked kitchen waste. Read the instructions carefully to see what you can and can’t add. It requires two buckets made with a special plastic impregnated with effective microorganisms—friendly bacteria, essentially. These start the breakdown process and work to eliminate odour. [JapaneseEnvironmentPlant-life] [full cite] (Jul. 17, 2007)
chindogu n. In Japan, the designer Kenji Kawakami promotes wacky gadgetry as an art he calls “chindogu”—literally “weird tools,” but more humorously translated as “unuseless inventions.” [Japanese] [full cite] (Mar. 21, 2005)
doji n. In no time you’ll be looking at your candlestick charts (which are based on an ancient Japanese system developed to analyze rice contracts) and looking for exotic price patterns like “morning star,” “dark cloud cover” and “dragon-fly doji.” [JapaneseMoney & FinanceJargon] [full cite] (Dec. 7, 2004)
doji n. Instead, it concerns an arcane 17th century Japanese method of mastering the markets via a system of “harmi line patterns,” “doji line candles” and “dark cloud corners.” [EnglishJapaneseMoney & FinanceJargon] [full cite] (Dec. 7, 2004)