to arrive at (e.g. a decision); to reach (a stage); to lead to (a place); to get to; in the extreme case of; (arch.) to come
another kind; distinct species; variety
worry; fear; anxiety; concern
domination; rule; direction; management; control (e.g. over one's emotions); determining (e.g. one's fate)
remainder; remnant; (not) very; (not) much; too much; excessively
towards (a destination); for the purpose of; with the goal of; targeting (a group, a demographic)
to wish (for); to pray (for); to hope (for); to pray silently; to recite (Buddha's name, sutras, etc.) in one's mind; to chant (a silent prayer)
like; similar to; as with; in the same way
cold; chilly; cold (attitude, stare, etc.); frigid; composed; cool
woman; female; feminine gender
head; hair (on one's head); mind; brains; leader; chief; top
middle; centre; center; midpoint; heart
blue; azure; green; pale; gray; unripe
yellow; high-pitched (voice); shrill
life; life force; lifetime; lifespan; most important thing; foundation
regrettable; disappointing; precious; dear; too good for; deserving better
appearing ...; looking ...; way to ...; method of ...ing; form; style
to get on (train, plane, bus, ship, etc.); to get in; to get on (e.g. a footstool); to step on; to reach; to go over; to follow
form; shape; state; condition; letter; correspondence
ring; loop (of rope); halo (of an angel)
feather; plume; wing; blade (of a fan, propeller, etc.); shuttlecock (in badminton); shuttlecock (in hanetsuki); arrow feathers
consists of; comprises; is made up of
centimeter; centimetre; centi-; 10^-2; sentimental
a short while ago; already
topic; subject; much talked about; topical; in the news
to leave; to exit; to leave (on a journey); to depart; to move forward; to come to; to get to
class (e.g. school); grade; rank; kyū; kyu; junior rank in martial arts, go, shogi, etc.
the four great sages (Buddha, Christ, Confucius, Socrates)
the person in question; prominent figure; distinguished person; that person
servant; manservant; menial
at once; immediately; right now
insolent fellow; rude fellow
first-person plural (or singular); second or third person plural (implies speaker is of higher status than those referred to)