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Shina and ),
** Shina ( word ), or Sina ( Japanese 支那 ), old Japanese word for China
Today, Burushaski contains numerous loanwords from Urdu ( including English, Persian and Sanskrit words received via Urdu ), and from neighbouring Dardic languages such as Shina and Khowar, as well as a few from Turkic languages, and from the neighboring Sino-Tibetan language Balti, and Wakhi and Pashto.
* Shina ( word ), a Japanese term for mainland China
* Shina ( word ), an old Japanese term for China
* Shina languages: Shina, Brokskad ( the Shina of Baltistan and Ladakh ), Ushojo, Domaaki, Palula and Savi
There are other equivalents for the name Wakhi ( Anglicised ) or Wakhani ( Arabic and Persian ), Vakhantsy ( Russian ), Gojali / Gojo ( Dingrik-wor / Shina ), Guyits / Guicho ( Borushaski ), Wakhigi / Wakhik-war ( Kivi-wor / Khow-wor ) and Cert ( Turki ).
In Pakistan Wakhi is spoken in the sparsely populated upper portions of five of the northernmost valleys: Hunza ( many ethnic Wakhi of this valley now speak Burushaski ), Gojal that including the valleys of Chipursan and Shingshal, ( Upper-Hunza — mostly intact ), Ishkoman ( many ethnic Wakhi speak, now, Shina ), Yasin ( many ethnic Wakhi of this valley speak, now, Khow-wor or Burushaski / Virchik-wor ), Gupis ( many ethnic Wakhi speak, now, Shina ) and Yarkhun ( many ethnic Wakhi of this valley now speak Khow-wor ).
A few compound words containing Shina have been altered ; for example, the term for Sinology was changed from 支那学 ( shinagaku ; Shina-studies ) to 中国学 ( chūgokugaku ; Chinese studies ) or 漢学 ( kangaku ; Han-studies ), and the name for the Second Sino-Japanese War has changed from terms such as 支那事變 ( Shina Jihen ; The China Incident ) and 日支事變 ( Nisshi Jihen ; The Japan-Shina Incident ) to 日中戦争 ( Nitchū Sensō ; Japan-China War ).
For example, the South and East China Seas are called Minami Shina Kai ( 南シナ海 ) and Higashi Shina Kai ( 東シナ海 ) respectively in Japanese ( prior to World War II, the names were written as 南支那海 and 東支那海 ), and one of the Chinese names for Indochina is Yindu Zhina ( 印度支那 ; Japanese: Indoshina ).

Shina and from
The Major and most dominating tribe of Gilgit-Baltistan is ' Shin ' while Shina is the language spoken by majority of the population from Ghizer of GB to Kohistan of KPK province.
Despite interchangeability of Chinese characters, Japan officially used the term Shina Kyōwakoku ( 支那共和国 ) from 1913 to 1930 in Japanese documents, while Zhonghua Minguo ( 中華民國 ) was used in Chinese ones.
Shinachiku ( 支那竹 or simply シナチク ), a ramen topping made from dried bamboo, also derives from the term " Shina ", but in recent years the word Menma ( メンマ ) has replaced this as a more " politically correct " name.
The NLI sepoys are drawn from eight major ethnic groups: the Baltees, Shins, Yashkuns, Mughals, Kashmiris, Pathans, Ladakis and Turks who speak the dialects of Balti, Shina, Brushaki, Khawer, Wakhi, Turki, Pushto, Urdu and Persian.
The Shina language is spoken in Pakistan's Northern Areas apart from Gilgit where most of the speakers live.
For instance in Eastern Shina ( Gultari ) the finite clause buje-m ' I will go ' can appear as the nominalized object of the postposition ' from ' with no modification in form:

Bloody and Roar
* Long ( Bloody Roar ), a fictional character in the video-game series Bloody Roar
* Bloody Roar 4 ( Kenji / Kakeru Ogami / 2nd Bakuryu )
* Bloody Roar ( 1997 ) – with Masaharu Iwata and Manabu Namiki
* Bloody Roar: Primal Fury-Bakuryu, Cronos ( uncredited in Xbox version )
The game would appear under the name " Bloody Roar " when ported to the PlayStation in 1998, which would become the permanent title thereafter.
There are three Bloody Roar sequels, plus a game based on a sidestory set between 3 and 4 on the Nintendo GameCube which was later ported to the Xbox.
* Bloody Roar ( 1997 )-with Atsuhiro Motoyama, Kenichi Koyano, Hitoshi Sakimoto, Masaharu Iwata, and Tomoko Miyagi
* Bloody Roar 2 ( 1999 )-with Masaharu Iwata, Kenichi Koyano, and Jin Watanabe
In addition to working as a translator for Square Enix, Smith has worked for Bowne Global Solutions ( later acquired by Lionbridge ), where he was contracted to work on several other video game localizations, including Bloody Roar 3, Breath of Fire: Dragon Quarter and Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney.
* Bloody Roar: Primal Fury-Xion the Unborn
Bloody Roar 3 is a brawler arcade video game developed by Eighting and Hudson Soft.
Its successor, Bloody Roar: Primal Fury was created for the Nintendo GameCube and was later ported to the Xbox as Bloody Roar: Extreme.
The main feature is still the ability to transform into beasts, which is involved in all of the Bloody Roar games.
* Bloody Roar 3 at GameSpot
* Bloody Roar 3 at Giant Bomb

Bloody and ),
* Bloody Sunday ( 1887 ), a demonstration in London, England against British repression in Ireland
* Bloody Sunday ( 1900 ), a day of high casualties in the Second Boer War, South Africa
* Bloody Sunday ( 1905 ), a massacre in Saint Petersburg, Russia that led to the 1905 and 1917 Russian Revolutions
* Marburg's Bloody Sunday ( 1919 ), a massacre of civilians of German ethnic origin in Maribor during the protest at the central city square
* Bloody Sunday ( 1920 ), a day of violence in Dublin, Ireland during the Irish War of Independence
* Bloody Sunday ( 1921 ), a day of violence in Belfast, Northern Ireland during the Irish War of Independence
* Bloody Sunday ( 1926 ), a day of violence in Alsace
* Bloody Sunday ( 1938 ), police violence against unemployment protesters in Vancouver, Canada
* Bloody Sunday ( 1939 ), aka Bromberg Bloody Sunday, a massacre in Bydgoszcz, Poland, at the onset of World War II
* Bloody Sunday ( 1965 ), a violent attack during the first of the Selma to Montgomery marches in Alabama, United States
* Bloody Sunday ( 1969 ), violence after a protest in Taksim Square, Istanbul, Turkey
* Bloody Sunday ( 1972 ), shooting of unarmed civilian protesters by the British Army ( Parachute Regiment ) in Derry, Northern Ireland
** Bloody Sunday Inquiry ( 1998 ), an inquiry commissioned by Tony Blair to investigate the killings of 1972
* Sunday Bloody Sunday ( film ), a 1971 film directed by John Schlesinger
* Bloody Sunday ( TV film ), a 2002 film depicting a version of events of Bloody Sunday 1972
* Bloody Mary ( folklore ), a ghost said to appear in mirrors when summoned
* Bloody Mary ( South Pacific ), a character in a book
* Bloody Mary ( DC Comics ), a fictional extraterrestrial vampire
* Bloody Mary ( Helix ), a comic book
* Bloody Mary ( Marvel Comics ), a fictional telekinetic supervillain
* Mary ( elephant ), or Bloody Mary or Murderous Mary, an elephant that was infamously publicly hanged
* " Bloody Mary " ( South Park ), an episode of the television series South Park
* " Bloody Mary " ( Supernatural ), an episode of the television series Supernatural

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