Bleach Wiki:Translation Corner

The Translation Corner is a place where a group of users can get together and help maintain the wiki by keeping it up to date on the actual translations of the various names, abilities, techniques and etc. found in the Bleach Universe.

Purpose of Project
The purpose of this project, as stated above, aims to help the site stay accurate in actual translations of the information used on site. The project will aim to give clear and concise information of translation for all the Japanese/Spanish/German phrases, techniques and general content that have transpired in the Bleach universe.

Associate Members

 * Adam Restling (Japanese)
 * MarqFJA (Japanese)
 * (Japanese)
 * Lia Schiffer (Spanish)

References & Sources

 * Kanji-to-English:
 * Tangorin
 * Mahou Kanji Dictionary
 * Kanji Networks
 * OldNihongo.J-Talk.Com
 * Basic Japanese verbal data: The imperative inflection of Japanese verbs

How the Corner Works
The usage of the corner is very simple. The page is set up in four sections.


 * Contentious Translations: If a translation is questioned at all, that should be brought up in this section. In this way a translator, committee member or admin can explain why the translation is used or conversation can take place for translations that are harder to classify.


 * Zanpakutō (names, release calls, etc.): This section is for requests for translation of zanpakuto and zanpakuto related translations.


 * Character and element (e.g. devices) names: This section is for requests for translation of characters/techniques/equipment and general key words.


 * General/Other translation issues (e.g. conjugation/miscellanea): This section is for requests about translations that dont fit any particular criteria such as conjugation or such things such as accents used in the names.

AssociateBox
Ok folks I have finally gotten around to makeing the Associate Box. You can put it on your user page using the command. Below is what the box looks like. Tinni  (Talk)  14:37, April 8, 2010 (UTC)

Beware Spurious Translations
With some words, mostly terms and names--esp. those which appear in the non-canon filler, and so cannot be researched as can material from the manga--there's a temptation to play games with "false friends" within the Japanese language itself; in other words, fans eager to find/know the meaning/Kanji of this person's name, or that new Zanpakutō, will use whatever resources are available to find Japanese words/elements that sound/look like these words and, frequently, edit in their selections as the de facto translations for these terms on their pages.

Unfortunately, much more often than not, this amounts to nothing more than wild mass guessing. In a language where there are a ton of elements which can all be read kō alone--not to mention that it's precisely this possible confusion that keeps Japanese from abandoning the lovely but complex Chinese Kanji as its writing system--playing the "close enough" game is a good way to proliferate die-hard false information.

As sucky as it is to not know what the correct meaning and spelling of words is, please refrain from just jamming hunches or possibilities into edits of pages as though they were confirmed, whenever you can. Admittedly, even "official" or more reputable-seeming sources (such as TV Tokyo, I think someone said) may prove erroneous; but it's far better to wait for them to appear in these more reputable (usu. Japanese) sources than to put in an educated guess that may well be wrong.

If it's an issue of expediency, i.e. if a word remains without translation longer than you think it should (given the duration of its appearance in the series, perhaps), please come and post here in the Corner to bring a sharper focus onto it, and we'll see if we can't amend such omissions more quickly. :) Adam Restling (talk) 10:41, October 5, 2011 (UTC)

Wisdom King and Vidyaraja connection
I did some more research on the subject and I was wondering what's the connection between the words "Wisdom King" and "Vidyaraja"?

As far as I understand:

Japanese to English: Myouou -> Wisdom King

Japanese to Sanskrit: Myouou -> Vidyaraja

Then: Wisdom King -> Vidyaraja

Now what I was wondering was where's the connection between the two words coming from? Xcetron (talk) 17:56, November 20, 2011 (UTC)

This has already been discussed, if it has no importance on the translation which is has been determined not to by are translators then there is no point to address this. This site is for bleach information, learning anything beyond that is not the job of the site nor is wasting the time of translators who have enough site related work to do.--Salubri (Talk)  19:32, November 20, 2011 (UTC)

I want to know the reason behind the change from "Wisdom King" to "Vidyaraja". That's why I am asking where's the connection between the two words, that is the English and Sanskrit words, "Wisdom King" and "Vidyaraja" respectively. Xcetron (talk) 07:24, November 21, 2011 (UTC)


 * I don't understand these questions, since as Salubri mentions above, we've already discussed these things, at some length, with you, here and here. To summarize quickly: vidyaraja (from the Sanskrit for "wisdom, enlightenment" [vidya-] & "king" [raja-]) was one of the Indic spiritual terms borrowed into Chinese and then Japanese from Sanskrit as mingwang and myouou (ming, myou "enlightenment" + wang, ou "king") respectively, of similar meaning. Any of these three, in English sources, is thus typically glossed as "wisdom/enlightenment king", but vidyaraja should be noted as the original source, and conveys its Indic nuance.


 * Thus, the same way we don't "translate" things like Kaname Tousen into Mr. "Keystone Eastsage", or Ichigo into Mr. "Oneguard", I rendered myouou as "vidyaraja", because myouou itself is the translation, and I thought using the original reference was the way to go. It gets back to the root, and all its nuanced meaning, from which all the other translations derived. But, of course, we still write Kokujou Tengen Myouou as its name, and save this deeper meaning (including "vidyaraja") for the gloss/explanation of its meaning. Adam Restling (talk) 10:43, December 7, 2011 (UTC)

Okay, I think I kind of get it, correct me if I am wrong. To shorten you used:

Sanskrit:

Wisdom -> Vidya

King -> Raja

So it's:

Myou -> Wisdom -> Vidya

Ou -> King -> Raja

In other words, you translated in the following order:

Japanese -> English -> Sanskrit

So it's one word instead of two? Xcetron (talk) 23:40, December 7, 2011 (UTC)


 * Yeah. It's generally spelt as a single word, a compound (like English doorman etc.), even if we usually use, in our English complete, literal translation the two word "wisdom king", instead of *"wisdomking".


 * And yes: the original word in myth was vidyaraja ("wisdom king"), borrowed and translated into Chinese as mingwang and Japanese as myouou ("enlightenment/wisdom king"). Since Komamura speaks Japanese, we keep the Myouou in the name of the Bankai, but translate it (in our explanatory gloss) with the original term vidyaraja that myouou was created to refer to in the first place. Adam Restling (talk) 15:13, December 8, 2011 (UTC)

Okay, I think I understand now. Thanks for the explanation. But how about we include the actual translation in English too, that is "Wisdom King of Black Ropes Divine Punishment". This way we explain the translation more thoroughly and the subject is more clear from where the Sanskrit translation is translated from. Xcetron (talk) 01:32, December 9, 2011 (UTC)


 * Thats not really Adam's call that would be an Admin call. It was decided to go with the translation Adam origianlly went. Simply putting Wisdom King isnt enough to carry any understanding of what a Wisdom King is. Hence why Vidyaraja was supported, you look it up and then have a better cultural understanding. Anything else additional would be watered down and taking up space. Thus why I would say no to it. --Salubri (Talk)  01:36, December 9, 2011 (UTC)


 * It's just as Salubri says. The most *I* would do is to embed a link to the cultural referent, as do most Wikis. For example, something like this in the article:


 * "Tenken's Bankai, Kokujō Tengen Myōō (黒縄天譴明王 Vidyaraja of Kalasutra's Heavenly Punishment) ..."


 * so it's easier for users to look-up--indeed, it directly links--to the reference. Adam Restling (talk) 06:12, December 9, 2011 (UTC)

Yes, I think that would help someone wondering where the Sanskrit translation is translated from. Additionally how about we replace "Viz "Divine Retribution, Black Ropes of Ruination"" with "Viz "Divine Punishment, Wisdom King of Black Ropes"" since it's more accurate. Xcetron (talk) 02:37, December 10, 2011 (UTC)
 * We do not make up the Viz translations. Viz translates all things themselves, we just list what they have.--

But isn't that translation more accurate? That's the point I am trying to make. I think we have to put the actual English translation somewhere so people don't get confused with the Sanskrit translation. Xcetron (talk) 02:51, December 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * As has been said to you multiple times already. It was chosen to go with Vidyaraja so that the whole context could be understood. This was the decision we made, this is the decision we will be keeping with.--

I didn't said to replace the Sanskrit translation. I said to put the actual English translation somewhere so people don't get confused with the Sanskrit translation. About the Viz translation, I said "Divine Punishment, Wisdom King of Black Ropes" is more accurate than "Divine Retribution, Black Ropes of Ruination". Xcetron (talk) 03:04, December 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * And again, we are not Viz, Viz is the official English Publisher of Bleach. They are the ones that put out the American volumes. They translate their own material. We simply note it. If we were to change it, it would no longer be the Viz translation. And once again, I have to tell you that we are sticking with Vidyaraja and not placing Wisdom King in there. If you want to know what Vidyaraja is, look it up as placing Wisdom King will also get just as many questions. There is a reason we did not place Wisdom King on the article and that is so people look up Vidyaraja so that they get a true understanding of what it is and what it means.--

So Viz is an offical translation? I didn't know that. I didn't said to not stick with Vidyaraja. I said to put the actual English translation somewhere so people don't get confused with the Sanskrit translation. Maybe in quotes pointing it's the translation from Japanese to English. Xcetron (talk) 03:20, December 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * Please read my comments above.--

Well, how about we put this somewhere then:

Komamura's Bankai translated from Japanese to English is: "Wisdom King of Black Ropes Divine Punishment". Xcetron (talk) 03:30, December 10, 2011 (UTC)

Yukio Full name
Yukio's full name is given in volume 53. I'd like to confirm if the correct name order for Yukio is Yukio Hans Vorarlberna or Hans Vorarlberna Yukio. Thanks 22:59, December 5, 2011 (UTC)


 * Looks like the latter, if the Japanese convention of "family name first" still applies... --Reikson (talk) 00:53, December 6, 2011 (UTC)


 * I'm not claiming to be an expert translator, but it seems that in cases of western names appearing in manga and anime series in general (not just Bleach), they seem to stick to the "first name first" usage. And although Yukio is an unusual case for most characters in this (given what the volume page shows us), I believe his first name is "Yukio", since on Page 8 of Chapter 471, Yukio's father does call him "Yukio". Arrancar109 (Talk)  01:02, December 6, 2011 (UTC)
 * I hope I'm not overstepping by offering my two cents... But having a Japanese surname with European first and middle names doesn't really make sense; there are laws in Japan concerning both given and family names, one being that children may only have their given names comprised from kanji that exist on a government-regulated list (see the Wikipedia article on Japanese names under the Regulation section). It would make more sense if Yukio's parents were of European descent and he was born in Japan, which would make "Hans" his middle name (middle names not being common in Japanese culture, thus another reason I don't quite thing "Yukio" is is surname) and "Vorarlberna" being his last. Of course, this is me trying to impose real-world laws on Kubo's world, so... ^.^' .Seshat. (talk) 01:20, December 6, 2011 (UTC)


 * I would have to agree in this situation with Seshat. Yukio is a Japanese first name. which would mean that Hans is the middle. Making Vorarlberna The last name. Yukio is japanese, Hans is germanic/scandinavian and Vorarlbena seems to be a variation of the german word Vorarlberg, a state of Austria. Stans to reason he has European ancestry.--Salubri (Talk)  02:41, December 6, 2011 (UTC)


 * Yeah, Hans and Voralberna are clearly German/Austrian. From what we have seen, every character including his own parents have called him Yukio. It makes the most sense if his first name is Yukio. Though I am not too sure on the middle name. Yes, Hans could be a middle name but its common in German last names for the name to be two parts such as Hans Vorarlberna. That would be what should be looked into--

Hey Sal I noticed that too about Voralberg (actually just answered a question on answers about this), and not to get off topic, but the European name, not to mention the European features such as the eyes and the hair and the face overall looks very european. At this point it would be rather safe to say Yukio has some European ethnicity. I don't know about the romanji pronunciation, but the english pronunciation for his last name should be fohr-ahrl-ber-na. Not sure if this is helpful, but I just thought I would add this. --Lemursrule (talk) 02:53, December 6, 2011 (UTC)

Not sure if this place would provide any help or not, but it does seem to have a few pages of explanation on surnames with Nordic backgrounds... And, since German and Austrian naming rules are so similar, you can also look here. .Seshat. (talk) 03:08, December 6, 2011 (UTC)


 * Yeah, you guys are right: "Yukio" is almost certainly his first/given name. When combining Western and Japanese names, the trend is to put them in the traditional Western "given name-(middle name-first surname-)surname" order. Besides, "Yukio" seems more like a first name, and one of you said it was what his father called him, so it would make the most sense. Although barring that, I suppose "Hans Vorarlberna Yukio" (similar to Souryuu Asuka Rangurē "Asuka Langley Soryu") would be possible, if far LESS likely. Adam Restling (talk) 10:58, December 7, 2011 (UTC)

I renamed the article, but there's still something that concerns me. The characters we have written for Yukio were "雪緒" before the change, but it was written as "雪绪" after the change on the article. Can you also confirm if one character is correct or if both are wrong? Arrancar109 (Talk)  19:47, December 7, 2011 (UTC)


 * The correct version is the one using "緒" (i.e., the first one used in the post above, "before the change"); "绪" is the simplified Chinese version, wherein the left radical "糹" has been simplified to "纟" instead, and is not used in the Japanese. Adam Restling (talk) 15:20, December 8, 2011 (UTC)

Tenken's Special Ability
Someone on Komamura's talk page brought up that Tenken's ability is described as being able to summon any giant limb, even though it has only ever been used to summon arms. Does his page from MASKED mention anything about the ability that could clear this up? Mohrpheus  (Talk)  16:18, April 30, 2011 (UTC)

Byakuya's Blood Type
This page from Unmasked apparently says that Byakuya's blood type is AB as opposed to the previous O which was given in past databooks. Can I get a confirmation on this please.--

Ishida technique in the fourth film
Hello. My question is this. So that the fourth film, Ishida used to Taikon, Gerd Sprenger it? Is that one writes, and what has kanji and romaji. Thank you in advance. 11:10, August 31, 2011 (UTC)


 * I tried looking this one up via its likely katakana spelling, but was unable to find anything other than citations of just "Sprenger" by itself. FYI, this technique, 破芒陣（シュプレンガー） Shupurengā, seems to be intended as German for "blaster"; the underlying Kanji mean "awn-rending array".


 * If I find anything on a Gerd Sprenger or the like, I'll try to let you all know :). Adam Restling (talk) 21:54, August 31, 2011 (UTC)

Jōmon Spells
I want confirmation on the romanizations of Ryubi no Jōmon, Koko no Jōmon, Hoyoku no Jōmon, Kikai no Jōmon and Shiji no Saimon. They're supposed to be Ryūbi no Jōmon, Kokō no Jōmon, Hōyoku no Jōmon, Kigai no Jōmon and Shijū Saimon, respectively.

http://www.manga-access.com/manga/B/Bleach/chapter/369/10 http://www.manga-access.com/manga/B/Bleach/chapter/369/15 http://www.manga-access.com/manga/B/Bleach/chapter/369/16 http://www.mangareader.net/94-22828-18/bleach/chapter-369.html http://www.mangareader.net/94-22828-11/bleach/chapter-369.html http://www.mangareader.net/94-22828-16/bleach/chapter-369.html http://www.mangareader.net/94-22828-17/bleach/chapter-369.html

They're the same by two different translators, except for Shijū Saimon, but they say Shijū Saimon in the anime as well. Mad Rest 21:17, July 30, 2011 (UTC)


 * I'll try to get on this soon, as well as continuing, esp., the UNMASKED stuff. But it looks like the second of the romanizations that Mad cites are prob. the correct ones, as the first set excludes a few of the long vowels from its transcriptions. The names are clearly inspired by the Four Forms, who are often also called, in Japanese, the "Four Beasts" (Shijuu) or the "Saint Beasts" (Seijuu). Adam Restling (talk) 05:50, August 1, 2011 (UTC)

Okay. Shijū Saimon (四獣塞門 Four Beast Ward Gate) consists of Ryūbi no Jōmon (竜尾の城門 Castle Gate of the Dragon's Tail) in front of the enemy, Kokō no Jōmon (虎咬の城門 Castle Gate of the Tiger's Bite) on the left, Kigai no Jōmon (亀鎧の城門 Castle Gate of the Turtle's Armor) on the right, and Hōyoku no Jōmon (鳳翼の城門 Castle Gate of the Phoenix's Wings) below. Adam Restling (talk) 04:32, September 19, 2011 (UTC)

Pronunciation of Kidō
I am under the impression that Bakudō #81 should be Dankū instead of Dankū, because the kanji 空, meaning 'space, void' is read as kuu and not ku. The same kanji is used in Kūkanten'i (空間転位), meaning Spatial Displacement and there it is listed as kū. Also, the same is for Hiryugekizokushintenraiho (撃賊震天雷砲); it should be Hiryūgekizokushintenraihō. Mad Rest 23:00, August 6, 2011 (UTC)


 * You're correct: kuu (or, in the Hepburn system used on by this Wiki, kū) it is.


 * Also (and I'm finishing up checking these in the "Techniques" 6-8 UNMASKED pages), the Kanji for Hiryū Gekizoku Shinten Raihō (as you corrected, not hiry u ) is missing its hiryū; it should be 飛竜 撃賊震天雷砲, I believe. Adam Restling (talk) 02:37, August 8, 2011 (UTC)


 * The kanji were one line down. I missed those two when I was copying it. Mad Rest 20:47, August 8, 2011 (UTC)


 * Also, will it be the same or different if the words in Hiryū Gekizoku Shinten Raihō are separated or conjoined (Hiryūgekizokushintenraihō)? <font color="silver" size="2px">Mad <font color="gold" size="2px">Rest 20:48, August 8, 2011 (UTC)


 * I suppose. Creating word boundaries for Japanese forms is often tricky, but I'd prefer doing it to having single "words" that are 30 letters long. I usu. try to make boundaries where it seems most natural, e.g. after compounds. Adam Restling (talk) 08:16, August 10, 2011 (UTC)

I'm sure it's the same as with Sajo Sabaku (鎖条鎖縛); Should it be Sajō Sabaku?
 * Also with Enkosen (円閘扇); Should it be Enkōsen? Also, when I checked the kanji for it on Tangorin it gave me the translations as Round Lock Fan, which is drastically different than the current translation, Arc Shield.
 * And with Kyokko (曲光), should it be Kyokkō or Kyokukō? <font color="silver" size="2px">Mad <font color="gold" size="2px">Rest 12:43, August 9, 2011 (UTC)


 * That's prob. true, but I don't want to confirm anything until I have a chance to double-check each of these terms. A quick check of common Japanese usages of these Kanji would seem to show that they are: Sajō Sabaku, Enkōsen, Kyokkō. And if those Kanji are the correct ones, then the correct translation is "round lock fan". Adam Restling (talk) 08:16, August 10, 2011 (UTC)


 * In case anyone missed these recent developments, cf. my work on the UNMASKED "Techniques" sections dealing with Kidou here, as they should now hold answers to the above queries. :) Adam Restling (talk) 19:38, August 31, 2011 (UTC)

Japanese translations for Spanish words
Can you please explain how Spanish words have different translations in Japanese?

like this one

Murciélago (黒翼大魔 (ムルシエラゴ), Murushierago; Spanish for "Bat", Japanese for "Black-Winged Great Demon") --Kisukeiscool100396 (talk) 21:49, September 9, 2011 (UTC)


 * I'll take this one; Kubo's assigning a pseudo-translation to the Spanish word. We both know that Murciélago is Spanish for "bat," but the way he wrote the scene is that the kanji is 黒翼大魔, but as opposed to its actual pronunciation, which would be something like "kokuyoku daima" which would have the hiragana of こくよくだいま, Kubo instead slapped the katakana of the Spanish word Murciélago onto it.
 * This means that while the name translates as "Black-Winged Great Demon" in this context, it's meant to be pronounced in the Japanese transliteration of the Spanish word for "bat;" as Murushierago.
 * Kubo knows that the words don't match; it's not what matters here. The Spanish-based names is to correlate with the Spanish-based nomenclature of everything related to Hollows. The kanji indicate what the name is supposed to mean in the context of the BLEACH-verse. --Reikson (talk) 22:05, September 9, 2011 (UTC)

In other words, the Spanish is simply to fall into account with the nature of Hollows, while the Japanese kanji reveal the meaning assigned to these foreign-language words. --Reikson (talk) 22:05, September 9, 2011 (UTC)

I was always wondering how that worked and now I know! Thanks--Kisukeiscool100396 (talk) 22:49, September 9, 2011 (UTC)


 * Yeah, like Reikson says, it's mostly Kubo's way of layering extra nuances of meaning into names, so it's not just a single meaning; e.g., in the above example, the meanings of simple "bat" and "great, black-winged devil", are both evoked via this layering in the mind of the resder.


 * Slayers does this, too, as in the naming of the Supreme Being of its cosmology, the Lord of Nightmares (金色の魔王（ロード・オブ・ナイトメア） Rōdo obu Naitomea), the Kanji of whose name mean "gold-colored devil king". Adam Restling (talk) 08:12, September 13, 2011 (UTC)

Digital Radial Invaders
I found the Kanji for Digital Radial Invaders can somebody please translate it? Here is the raw so you can see the Kanji so you don't think I'm lying.--Kisukeiscool100396 (talk) 20:59, September 12, 2011 (UTC) http://mangahead.com/index.php/Manga-Raw-Scan/Bleach/Bleach-463-Raw-Scan/12.jpg?action=big&size=original&fromthumbnail=true

画面外の侵略者 （デジタル・ラジアル・インヴェイダーズ）


 * Apparently, the symbols means something like "Invaders from Outside of the Scene" and reads as Dejitaru Rajiaru Inveidāzu. --Reikson (talk) 21:18, September 12, 2011 (UTC)


 * Plus, your thumbnail link isn't working. --Reikson (talk) 21:19, September 12, 2011 (UTC)

So can I add it to Yukio's page? Also try this link.--Kisukeiscool100396 (talk) 21:32, September 12, 2011 (UTC)

http://s1.mangahead.com/mangas/Manga-Raw-Scan/Bleach/Bleach-463-Raw-Scan/12.jpg


 * Let the experts decide what's what with that translation. I just gave you an uneducated guess through the help of online translators. --Reikson (talk) 22:46, September 12, 2011 (UTC)


 * The Kanji and katakana look like they match to the raw pic. 画面外の侵略者 seems to (be intended to) mean something close to "beyond-screen invaders", or "invaders (from) outside the screen"; 画面 is used to refer to a TV, video game or computer screen, or the image therein. Adam Restling (talk) 08:03, September 13, 2011 (UTC)

Sumitsukigasa's technique
Hi. Is there a record of kanji and rōmaji, and translation of two Yushima's attacks? Namely Hajokuri and Renzan: Hajokuri. Thanks in advance. 15:40, September 28, 2011 (UTC)


 * The word "Renzan" suggests 連斬, meaning "serial beheading," but unless you can find kanji, this is merely supposition... --Reikson (talk) 15:44, September 28, 2011 (UTC)


 * According to the Japanese Wiki (which luckily has updated this far), it's Hajō Kūri (覇錠空蔾 Tyrant Lock Void Bramble) and Renzan - Hajō Kūri (連斬 覇錠空蔾), where renzan is indeed "serial-slashing" + the same Hajō Kūri (I use "slashing" instead of "beheading" because this is the semantic broadening ["behead" > "slay/strive with sword"] the element seems to enjoy in use, at least in BLEACH [like in  Zan pakutō,  Zan getsu, I believe]). The Kanji 蔾 seems to be pretty rare--none of my usu. sources even gave it a Japanese reading--but is translated as "a kind of bramble", and seems especially applied to Chenopodiaceae (Goosefoot).


 * FYI: The current Kanji for Sumitsukigasa (man, those filler dudes love their long names sometimes) and its release call are wrong, according to the Japanese Wiki: they should be 墨月暈 (Ink Moon Halo -- that is a *purdy* cool name; the current Kanji were half-right, though) and tagire (滾れ), which *does* still mean "seethe".


 * One more thing: the Kanji for Raikū are 來空 "coming void". Adam Restling (talk) 09:15, October 5, 2011 (UTC)

Has anyone made the required changes to the Yushima and Inaba pages yet? --Reikson (talk) 02:03, November 19, 2011 (UTC)

Kidō Kanji Verification
Hi, I checked the images of the UNMASKED Character Book you uploaded (Techniques 7) and I noticed several differences between the kanji in the character book and those on the Kidō page.

1. Tsuzuri Raiden: 綴雷電 in the character book, 製本電 on the Kidō page. The only correct kanji is 電 (lightning) and I don't know how they came up with 製 (manufacture) and 本 (origin/book).

2. Sōren Sōkatsui: 双漣蒼火墜 in the character book, 双蓮蒼火墜 on the Kidō page. The kanji for "ren" differ: 漣 (ripple) in the databook and 蓮 (lotus) on the Kidō page.

3. Hiryūgekizokushintenraihō: 飛竜撃賊震天雷炮 in the character book, 飛竜撃賊震天雷砲 on the Kidō page. The kanji for "hō" differ: 炮 (sear) in the databook and 砲 (cannon) on the Kidō page.

I suggest you change them. DarkblueFlow (talk) 15:36, October 7, 2011 (UTC)


 * You are in face correct and the translations have been changed.--<font color="00BFFF" size="2px">Salubri <font color="1E90FF" size="2px">(Talk)  16:25, October 7, 2011 (UTC)


 * There are a lot of Kidō that this site has mistranslated. I've been pointing this out for months. It's not the data books that are wrong, it's this site's information. <font color="silver" size="2px">Mad <font color="gold" size="2px">Rest 16:06, October 7, 2011 (UTC)


 * We have also told you we are not native Japanese speakers and therefore we cant account for the accent marks when we dont have the english translations. The proven translators have a hard enough time translating the material and when they find the issue they make sure it is fixed. Whining that you dont get your way immediately especially with no proof is not gonna help your situation.--<font color="00BFFF" size="2px">Salubri <font color="1E90FF" size="2px">(Talk)  16:25, October 7, 2011 (UTC)

Correct Kanji for Addiction Shot
The Kanji for Addiction Shot on Riruka's page is incorrect. Here is the correct one and here is the proof .--Kisukeiscool100396 (talk) 23:23, November 4, 2011 (UTC)

アディクション・ショット


 * Seems whoever came up with the kanji that was on the page went to google translate and converted the English phrase "Addiction Shot" to kanji rather than looking at the raw and copying the kanji that was actually used by Kubo. It has been fixed now. Thanks Kisukeiscool 11:20, November 5, 2011 (UTC)

Deadly Darts
デッドリ・ダーツ DeddorI Dātsu

It seems the kanji and the pronunciation for this technique which I found on this page is incorrect.

The kanji should be "デッドリー・ダーツ", with an additional "ー", as shown in the UNMASKED (the lower right portion of the scan).

As for its pronunciation, "DeddorI" should end with a small long "I" ("ī"), not with a capital "I".

I need a confirmation that my claim is true. --<font style="background: black" face="Courier" color="white"> The Goblin  <font style="background: white" face="Courier" color="black"> Talk   22:56, November 29, 2011 (UTC)


 * Yeah, you're correct. Sorry about that. I did a lot of those in a marathon session that resulted in my PC acting all sluggish from juggling browser windows and my text documents, so although I thought I'd corrected it all, looks I missed (at least) this one. Plus, I missed changing the capital I (which I used as a place-holder) with the character I meant to insert to replace it, ī (as you mentioned).


 * Thus, it should be as Goblin says: デッドリー・ダーツ Deddorī Dātsu. Thanks for the correction :). I'm glad there are those who can proofread my work when technical difficulties may've let me miss these things. Adam Restling (talk) 09:54, December 7, 2011 (UTC)

Volume 53's poem

 * 僕がこんなにも若く
 * こんなにも未熟であるということが
 * 老いさらばえ
 * 完全無欠である大人達には
 * どうにも許し難いことのようなのだ

Poem from volume 53 - can we get a translation of this please. 15:08, December 2, 2011 (UTC)


 * My crack at it:


 * It seems that I, even this young,
 * even being this inexperienced,
 * have grown withered by age
 * As for the adults, being completely flawless,
 * such is like a thing impossible to forgive.


 * For more in-depth analysis--as well as to decide for yourself how accurate you think I might be--please see here :).


 * Note: the "such" in my trans.' last line refers to the first, and should be read as "for the adults [...] such [a thing as being young and inexperienced] is like a thing impossible to forgive". Adam Restling (talk) 09:15, December 7, 2011 (UTC)