[がいらい, gairai] (n, adj-no) (1) (abbr) external origin; imported; (2) outpatient; (P) #7516
[でんらい, denrai] (n, adj-no) ancestral; hereditary; imported; transmitted; handed down #14488
[がいか, gaika] (n) (1) foreign currency; foreign money; foreign exchange; (2) foreign goods; imported goods; (P)
[がいざい, gaizai] (n) foreign or imported timber
[ぎゃくゆにゅうしゃ, gyakuyunyuusha] (n) reverse-imported vehicle (esp. high-displacement motorcycles meant for sale outside Japan)
[こわたり, kowatari] (n) old imported article
[さんとめじま(桟留縞);サントメじま(サントメ縞), santomejima ( san ryuu shima ); santome jima ( santome shima )] (n) striped cotton fabric imported from Sao Tome, also copied in Japan
[あかえ, akae] (n) (1) late 19C woodblock prints, using imported aniline dyes; (2) red painting on ceramics
[ちゅうごくでんらい, chuugokudenrai] (adj-no) imported (transmitted) from China
[てんじく, tenjiku] (n) (1) (obs) India; (2) (abbr) (See 天竺木綿) cotton sheeting; (n-pref) (3) foreign; imported; (4) ultra-spicy; extra hot
[とうさんぼん, tousanbon] (n) (See 和三盆) high-quality sugar imported from China
[からたけ;かんちく(漢竹), karatake ; kanchiku ( kan take )] (n) (arch) Chinese bamboo; bamboo imported from China (often used to make flutes)
[からもの;とうぶつ;とうもつ, karamono ; toubutsu ; toumotsu] (n) fancy ancient Chinese imported goods; imported goods
[からき, karaki] (n) exotic non-Japanese wood (rosewood, ebony, blackwood, etc.); imported wood
[なんばんとらい, nanbantorai] (n) (articles) imported to Japan by early European traders
[はくらい, hakurai] (n, adj-no) imported; foreign-made; (P)
[はくらいひん, hakuraihin] (n) imported article; imported goods
[ゆにゅうばん, yunyuuban] (n) foreign (imported) record
[ゆにゅうひん, yunyuuhin] (n) imported goods
[ゆにゅうまい, yunyuumai] (n) imported rice
[ようぎん, yougin] (n) (1) German silver; nickel silver; (2) silver coinage imported to Japan during the late Edo and early Meiji periods
[うんげん;うげん, ungen ; ugen] (n) method of dying in which a color repeatedly goes from dense to diffuse, diffuse to dense - imported from western China and used in Buddhist pictures, temple ornaments, etc., during the Nara and Heian periods