[sefarudeimu] (n) (See アシュケナジム) Sephardim (Jews of Spanish or Portuguese descent)
[serapimu ; serahin] (n) (セラピム from Latin 'seraphim'; セラヒン supposedly from Portuguese 'seraphin') seraphim
[fejoa-da ; fejoada] (n) feijoada (Portuguese stew of beans with beef, pork, etc.)
[ポルトガルご, porutogaru go] (n) Portuguese (language)
[かつおのえぼし;カツオノエボシ, katsuonoeboshi ; katsuonoeboshi] (n) (uk) Portuguese man-of-war (Physalia physalis)
[カルサン, karusan] (n) (uk) (See 袴) hakama fashioned in the style of the pantaloons worn by the Portuguese (por
[てんしょうカルタ, tenshou karuta] (n) (See ウンスンカルタ) Portuguese card game popular in Japan during the late 16th century
[でんきクラゲ(電気クラゲ);でんきくらげ(電気水母), denki kurage ( denki kurage ); denkikurage ( denki kurage )] (n) (col) (See 鰹の烏帽子) Portuguese man-of-war (Physalia physalis)
[なんばんじん, nanbanjin] (n) (arch) (See 紅毛人) southern barbarian (used to describe Western Europeans who visited Japan prior to the Edo period, esp. the Spanish and the Portuguese)
[なんばんせん, nanbansen] (n) foreign ship (esp. of Spanish and Portuguese ships arriving from the south prior to the Edo period)
[にっぽじしょ, nippojisho] (n) Vocabvlario da Lingoa de Iapam (Japanese-Portuguese dictionary, published 1603-1604)
[ばてれん;パテレン;バテレン, bateren ; pateren ; bateren] (n) (1) Portuguese Jesuits (in Japan in the 16th century) (por
[ひりょうず;ひりゅうず;ひろうす, hiryouzu ; hiryuuzu ; hirousu] (n) (1) filhos (traditional Portuguese dessert) (por
[らぽにちじてん, raponichijiten] (n) Dictionarium Latino Lusitanicum, ac Iaponicum, (Latin- Portuguese-Japanese dictionary, pub. 1595)