Shannarō has no literal meaning, but can translate into Hell yeah!, Hell no!, or Damn it! (depending on the situation). In the English dub, the phrase was replaced by a forceful Cha, which Sakura has a unique way of saying.
“Dattebayo” is a catchphrase used by Naruto in the Naruto franchise, which is inherited from his mother, Kushina, who says, “dattebane”. Dattebayo is translated into “believe it” in the English dub which is essentially what it means. だって, or datte, means “it must go my way” or “believe what I say”.
One of the most well-known and best Sasuke Uchiha quotes is his catchphrase, which he is often found using to call Naruto: "Usuratonkachi," which roughly translates to "thin hammer." He calls Naruto a "thin hammer" because it represents a tool that cannot actually perform its job, something which is simply useless.
“Dattebayo” is what he actually says in Japanese, but it has no direct translation since it's more of a verbal tic than an actual word, so originally the people who dubbed Naruto decided to instead go with the mouth shape and create a catchphrase for Naruto that matched the shape of his mouth.
When Sakura is in Fight mode, she leaves her girly side, and just focuses on the fight. The “Shannaro” is apparently that: crude usage of Japanese in contrast to the refined usage of Japanese she normally uses.
The diamond shaped tattoo that appears on Sakura's forehead at the end of Naruto and all throughout Boruto: Naruto Next Generations is both a homage to her teacher, Tsunade, and a hidden means to drastically enhance her abilities.
“Dattebayo” is what he actually says in Japanese, but it has no direct translation since it's more of a verbal tic than an actual word, so originally the people who dubbed Naruto decided to instead go with the mouth shape and create a catchphrase for Naruto that matched the shape of his mouth.
1/8 cup equals one ounce. For liquid you can use a shot glass, just make sure your reading an ounce and not a jigger. Or you can measure 1 ounce in a small measuring cup. For dry measure you can fill a quarter cup measure half way or fill up to the 1oz.
5 gramsOne teaspoon of table salt weighs 6 grams and contains 2,325 mg sodium. One teaspoon of sea salt weighs 5 grams and contains 1,872 mg sodium.
The American Heart Association recommends consuming no more than 2,300 milligrams of sodium—about one teaspoon of salt—daily. (And about 6 in 10 adults should limit themselves to 1,500 milligrams a day.)