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  1. “ballyhoo” (English) in Japanese is

    バリーフー

  2. Translation for 'ballyhoo' in the free English-Japanese dictionary and many other Japanese translations.

  3. Ballyhoo meaning in Japanese. Here you learn English to Japanese translation / English to Japanese dictionary of the word Ballyhoo and also play quiz in Japanese words starting with B also play A-Z dictionary quiz. To learn Japanese language, common vocabulary and grammar are the important sections.

  4. Jisho is a powerful Japanese-English dictionary. It lets you find words, kanji, example sentences and more quickly and easily. Enter any Japanese text or English word in the search box and Jisho will search a myriad of data for you.

  5. Definitions of 'ballyhoo'. 1. You can use ballyhoo to refer to great excitement or anger about something, especially when you disapprove of it because you think it is unnecessary or exaggerated. [disapproval] [...] 2. If you say that something is ballyhooed, you mean that there is a lot of excitement about it and people are claiming that it is ...

    • 🧑 San (さん) The simplest translation would be "Mr" or "Mrs" (so this is a unisex suffix), but it signifies much more than that. "- San" is used with someone we respect and with whom one is not especially close, for example a colleague or boss, customers or anyone you don’t know very well.
    • 🧒 Kun (君,くん) This is a less formal title with a lower level of politeness. In fact the symbol or kanji is the same as that of "kimi", like "you" in its familiar form or the French "tu" (especially between couples).
    • 👧 Chan (ちゃん) "-Chan" performs a function similar to "kun", except that it is used mainly with girls. It's quite an affectionate word, which might be used with a friend, a classmate, a little sister, a baby, a grandmother, a girl or a woman to let her know you think she is sweet.
    • 🧑‍💼 Senpai (先輩、せんぱい) This signifies that a person in a group has more experience such as a senior colleague or a high school senior if you’re in a lower grade.
  6. Used as a substitute for hell in various idiomatic expressions, as to give (a person) ballyhoo, to go to ballyhoo, etc.; in later use esp. in like ballyhoo, to raise ballyhoo (cf. hell n. & int. Phrases P.4c, Phrases P.5i). Formerly also occasionally used more generally to mean: chastisement or rough treatment.

  7. BALLYHOO meaning: 1. a lot of noise and activity, often with no real purpose: 2. a lot of noise and activity, often…. Learn more.

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