Definition of bushido in English:
 bushido
noun ˈbuːʃɪdəʊbʊˈʃiːdəʊˈbo͞oSHēˌdō
mass nounThe code of honour and morals developed by the Japanese samurai.
 Example sentencesExamples
-  As well as fighting, he immersed himself in the samurai's code of bushido, also known as the way of the warrior.
 -  Hara kiri developed as an integral part of the code of bushido and the discipline of the samurai warrior class.
 -  It's set in 1865, the year regarded as the last hurrah for bushido, the samurai code (Japan was on the verge of leaving its self-imposed isolation).
 -  The notion that the samurai's bushido represents a moral or social principle to live by is more than dubious.
 -  The military version of bushido was seen as a distortion of samurai ethics by some of the upper class who resented the commoner military.
 
Origin
  
Japanese, from bushi 'samurai' + dō 'way'.
Rhymes
  
aikido, credo, Guido, Ido, libido, lido, speedo, teredo, torpedo, tuxedo