; オンラインWikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス(英和) 見出し単語一覧

オンラインWikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス(英和) 見出し単語一覧

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  1. Ninjindaioko Chogin (September 1710, 20 t, 80%)
  2. Ninjitsu
  3. Ninjitsu (1091-July 11, 1131) was a priest of the Tendai sect in the late Heian period.
  4. Ninjitsu entered the temple on Mt. Hiei and learned about the Tendai Sect while studying under Ninkaku, Ningen, Keicho, Ningo, Shokaku and Sokan.
  5. Ninjo (an attack using sword) Inside the Palace
  6. Ninjo-banashi (Sentimental Story)
  7. Ninjo-banashi is a category of rakugo program (traditional comic storytelling).
  8. Ninjo-mono (literally "tale of human feelings") (such as "Hachi-no-ki," "Shunkan," "Kagekiyo")
  9. Ninjobon (a romantic genre of fiction): "Shunshoku umegoyomi" (Spring-Color Plum Calendar) by Shunsui TAMENAGA
  10. Ninjobon (works of sentimental fiction in the Edo period)
  11. Ninjobon book
  12. Ninjobon is a book mainly dealing with romance.
  13. Ninjomai dance
  14. Ninjutsu
  15. Ninjutsu (ninja art)
  16. Ninjutsu Yashiki
  17. Ninjutsu includes various martial arts such as swordplay and Jujutsu but equipment (weapons) specific to Ninjutsu is referred to as Ningu or Ninki.
  18. Ninkai NOMURA commanded the Kiheitai Army, advancing the troop to Bungo Province (Oita Prefecture), and played an active part in the middle, latter period of the Seinan War.
  19. Ninkaku
  20. Ninkaku (1045 - April 17, 1102) was a priest of the Tendai Sect during the latter part of the Heian period.
  21. Ninkan
  22. Ninkan (birth date unknown - 1114) was the founder of the Tachikawa School (Esoteric Buddhism).
  23. Ninkan died in Izu five months after being banished there.
  24. Ninkan enthusiastically studied the teachings of the Shingon Sect under Shokaku and ascended to the highest Shingon Sect rank of Ajari.
  25. Ninkan is a term which was formerly used in the Japanese government-regulated organisations since the implementation of the Ritsuryo system in the Nara era and is still used today in the government and state institutions.
  26. Ninkan means being appointed to a government post.
  27. Ninkan was born as the eldest son of Sadaijin (Minister of the Left) MINAMOTO no Toshifusa of the Murakami-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  28. Ninki
  29. Ninki is a general term for tools that were supposedly used by the Ninja (a secret agent in feudal Japan highly skilled in stealth and secrecy).
  30. Ninki was mentioned as old as in "Bansen/Mansen Shukai," a Ninjutsu (ninja techniques) strategy book which was written by Yasutake SAMUJI.
  31. Ninkoto tower at the side of it is 289 cm tall.
  32. Ninkyo mono (stories of chivalrous men)
  33. Ninmon
  34. Ninmon (仁聞) was a legendary monk who is said to have founded 28 temples in various places in Kunisaki peninsula in Oita Prefecture in the Nara period.
  35. Ninmyo-Genji
  36. Ninna
  37. Ninna Mikkyo Gakuin (school of Esoteric Buddhism): Founded in the precinct of Ninna-ji Temple in 1972
  38. Ninna denpo sho (place to teach Buddhism)
  39. Ninna-goryu simplified lineage (founder, Kakuho): Kukai - Shinga - Gennin - Yakushin - Kanpyo Hoo (Emperor Uda) - Kancho - Saishin - Shoshin - Kanjo - Kakuho
  40. Ninna-ji Hoson
  41. Ninna-ji Palace - It is the Honbo, located on the western side of the path from the Nio-mon gate to the Chu-mon gate, and stands where the Monk-Emperor Uda had his residence.
  42. Ninna-ji Temple
  43. Ninna-ji Temple (Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture): The Edo period (1644); 37.1 m tall
  44. Ninna-ji Temple (Shingon Sect, Kyoto City)
  45. Ninna-ji Temple - Grand head temple of the Shingon sect Omuro-ha (真言宗御室派総本山)
  46. Ninna-ji Temple Reiho-kan
  47. Ninna-ji Temple [Omuro Ouchi, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  48. Ninna-ji Temple is the main temple of the Omuro sect of Shingon Buddhism, located in Omuro, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  49. Ninna-ji Temple served as their supervisor since 1158.
  50. Ninna-ji Temple therefore enjoyed the protection of the Imperial family and nobles; until the Meiji period princes and members of the Imperial family served as Monzeki (chief priests), controlling all sects of Buddhism as the head of Monzeki Temples.
  51. Ninna-ji Temple used to sponsor an "Omuro Ninna-ji Temple Mt. Joju 88 Places Stamp Hike" 6 times per year.
  52. Ninna-ji Temple's 14 Buildings: the Gojyu-no-to (5-story pagoda), the Kannondo, the Chu-mon gate, the Nio-mon gate, the Shoro (bell tower), the Kyozo (scripture storehouse), the Goeido, the Goeido Chu-mon gate, 3 buildings of Kusho Myojin Shrine, the Ryokakutei, the Hitotei
  53. Ninna-ji Temple's cherry trees have been named "Omuro-zakura".
  54. Ninna-ji Temple: Kondo (the main hall)
  55. Ninna-ji goji zaidan (financial group)
  56. Ninnaji Kuronuri Tebako Shogyo: 65 Volumes; 3 Books; 138 Pictures; 32 Letters; 16 鋪; 28 Leaves
  57. Ninnakai
  58. Ninnikusen-ryu simplified lineage (founder, Kanpen): Kukai - Shinga - Gennin - Yakushin - Kanpyo Hoo (Emperor Uda) - Kancho - Saishin - Shoshin - Kanjo - Kanpen
  59. Ninnokyo Ryohi Sho (Ryohi's commentary on the Benevolent Kings Sutra)
  60. Ninohe City, Iwate Prefecture
  61. Ninoku-wo-tsugenai (to be dumbstruck)
  62. Ninokuni was divided into three provinces--Tanba Province, Tango Province, and Tajima Province.
  63. Ninoma Kannon-ku Mass (二間観音供) (1 person)
  64. Ninomai' is a Tsugaimai dance performed together with 'Ama,'; exceptionally, both of them belong to Saho but only for costumes, while Uho costumes are used in Ninomai.
  65. Ninomai-wo-mau
  66. Ninomaru (Secondary Compound)
  67. Ninomaru Garden
  68. Ninomaru Goten consists of 6 buildings arranged diagonally one after another and connected by a hallway: Tozamurai, Shikidai, Ohiroma, Sotetsu-no-ma, Kuro Shoin and Shiro Shoin.
  69. Ninomaru Goten, the central building of Ninomaru, stands in front and diagonally to the right when viewed from Higashi Ote-mon Gate.
  70. Ninomaru Goten: Designated a National Treasure according to the Law for the Protection of Cultural Properties on March 29, 1952
  71. Ninomaru Palace
  72. Ninomaru Palace Partition Paintings: Designated on June 5, 1982
  73. Ninomaru Sawaguchi Tamon-yagura (corridor-style gate of Sawaguchi in the outer citadel, acted as a stonehouse and defense post at the entrance to the second enclosure)
  74. Ninomaru Shoin in Nijo-jo Castle
  75. Ninomaru Shoin in Nijo-jo Castle, which was built by the third Shogun Iemitsu TOKUGAWA, is famous as an example of shoin-zukuri that still exists today.
  76. Ninomaru and sannomaru
  77. Ninomaru densha (the hall of the second fortress) in the Nijo-jo Castle and the meeting place in the Nishi Hongan-ji Temple are famous for the pictures on partitions of Shoin-zukuri style.
  78. Ninomaru is divided into eastern and western sections by the Shikiri-mon Gates on the north and south sides of Honmaru (some documents refer to the western section as "Nishinomaru").
  79. Ninomiya Akagi-jinja Shrine in Maebashi City, Gunma Prefecture
  80. Ninomiya in Kozuke Province.
  81. Ninomiya-jinja Shrine
  82. Ninomiya: Ninomiya-jinja Shrine (Ninomiya, Akiruno City, Tokyo)
  83. Ninose Station
  84. Ninose Station - Kibuneguchi Station - Kurama Station
  85. Ninose Station, located in the Sakyo ward of Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Kurama Line of the Eizan-dentetsu (Eizan Electric Railway).
  86. Ninose Village can be reached by taking the stairs down from the station.
  87. Ninose-yuri Trail
  88. Ninpei January 26, 1151 - October 28, 1154
  89. Ninsei NONOMURA
  90. Ninsei NONOMURA (野々村仁清: date of birth and date of death are unknown) is a potter in the early Edo Period.
  91. Ninsei NONOMURA: The maker of iro-e toki (painted earthen vessel) called "Kyoyaki" (Kyoto-style ceramic art)
  92. Ninshi KUJO
  93. Ninshi KUJO (born October 31, 1173, died February 3, 1239) was an empress and nyoin (a close female relative of the Emperor or a woman of comparable standing) from the end of Heian Period to Kamakura Period.
  94. Ninsho
  95. Ninsho (1217 August 19 - August 25, 1303) is a Ritsu sect (Shingon Ritsu sect) monk in the Kamakura period.
  96. Ninsho felt that relief of "Hinin" would only promote the discrimination, so he gave his best effort in the relief of all hierarchy including the Hinin.
  97. Ninsho was a monk who made great efforts to revive religious precepts and did work to benefit society during the Kamakura Period, and his ashes were buried in three places, Gokuraku-ji Temple, Kakuan-ji Temple and Chikurin-ji in Ikoma (Ikoma City).
  98. Ninsho was criticized by Nichiren and opposed against him.
  99. Ninsho's cinerary urn has a unique shape like a liquor bottle, and a bronze urn of the same type as that from Kakuan-ji Temple was also excavated from the tomb of Ninsho in Chikurin-ji Temple.
  100. Ninsokuyoseba was also set up in Kamigo Village, Tsukuba County, Hitachi Province (present day Kamigo, Tsukuba City, Ibaraki Prefecture), Osaka, and Hakodate (present day Hakodate City).
  101. Ninsokuyoseba, Hitsuke Tozoku Aratame-kata Ninsokuyoseba by formal name, was a self-support facility set up by the Edo Shogunate for minor offenders and those who are likely to commit crimes.
  102. Nintendo Headquarters Office
  103. Nintendo Kyoto R&D Center (formerly the headquarters)
  104. Nintendo Kyoto Research Center (Former Nintendo Head Office Building)
  105. Nintendo Ogura Uji factory
  106. Nintendo headquarters office
  107. Nintendo, famous for cards and video games, possesses all three of its factories in the city.
  108. Ninth Daughter: 舒姫 (1802 - 1803)
  109. Ninth Son: Torachiyo (1806 ? 1810), the adopted son of Harutomi TOKUGAWA, head of the Kishu-Tokugawa family
  110. Ninth daughter: Tsuneko (September 23, 1882 - August 18, 1939, married to Prince Fushimi Hiroyasu on January 9, 1897)
  111. Ninth generation grandson of TACHIBANA no Kimisai.
  112. Ninth rank: Chu (middle) sozu
  113. Ninth rank: Chu sozu (the second-highest position, middle grade)(yellow-green)
  114. Ninth rank: Chusozu, Nil, Tsukasako, Shikyo (bishop), (in the third year of college)
  115. Ninth shogun: Yoshihisa ASHIKAGA (Jotoku-in)
  116. Ninth son : Yoshisuke
  117. Ninth son, Makoto TOKUGAWA (October 31, 1887 - November 11, 1968)
  118. Ninth temporary teacher raining school, Tohoku Imperial University (1923-1932)
  119. Ninth volume: Kitano Tenjin Shrine no koto.
  120. Ninto (ninja sword)
  121. Nio mon (Gate of Deva)
  122. Nio,' the name of the facilities, is given after the Nio-mon gate of Komyo-ji Temple, a national treasure, which is located near the hotspring.
  123. Nio-koen Park
  124. Nio-mon (0) - 287m - Yuki Shrine (50) - 791m - Main Shrine Golden Hall (160)
  125. Nio-mon (gate of the two Deva Kings)
  126. Nio-mon Gate
  127. Nio-mon Gate (Gate of Deva)
  128. Nio-mon Gate (Important Cultural Property) - located north of the main hall (Zao-do Hall), it is a Niju-mon (two-story gate) of irimoya style (building with a half-hipped roof) and hongawarabuki (a style of tile roofing in which round and square tiles are laid down alternately).
  129. Nio-mon Gate (Important Cultural Property): It was rebuilt in 1612.
  130. Nio-mon Gate has been designated an Important Cultural Property.
  131. Nio-mon Gate: Topped by a gable roof and stands three bays wide with the middle bay serving as an entrance.
  132. Nio-mon gate
  133. Nio-mon gate (two-storey gate): Rebuilt during the mid-Edo period and registered as a Cultural Property by the Kyoto Prefectural Government.
  134. Nio-mon gate: The Nio (two Deva kings) were enshrined.
  135. Nio-mon was burned down in 1891, and rebuilt in 1911.
  136. Nio-mon(Sanmon Station)(0) - 200m - Tahoutou Station (120) - 456m - Main Shrine Golden Hall(160)
  137. Nioi (literally "scent")
  138. Nioko WAKAE
  139. Nioko WAKAE (1835 - October 11, 1881) was a lady from court noble.
  140. Niomon gate of Bujo-ji Temple [Hanase Harachi-cho, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  141. Niomon gate of Komyo-ji Temple [Ayabe City]
  142. Niomon gate of Tofuku-ji Temple
  143. Niomon gate: Built in 1350; irimoya-zukuri style (building with a half-hipped roof); shingled-roof; single storey eight-legged gate.
  144. Niomon gate: Constructed as the south gate of Honkoku-ji Temple during the Jowa era (1345-1350) of the Northern and Southern Court period; relocated to its current site in 1616; topped by a thatched roof.
  145. Niomon gate: Constructed mid Edo period and houses a statue of Kongo Rikishi (Nio) (cultural property designated by Kyoto Prefecture)
  146. Niomon-dori Street
  147. Niomon-dori Street is a street running east-west through Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  148. Niomon-dori takes its name from the Niomon (meaning "gate guarded by the Deva Kings") of Chomyo-ji Temple.
  149. Nionoumi, another name for Lake Biwa, is an utamakura, a word or phrase used in waka specifically in the context of a certain theme, which in this case is Omi Province.
  150. Niou Hyobukyo, Kobai, Takekawa are called the Three Quires of Nioumiya.
  151. Niou Miya
  152. Niou Miya (His Perfumed Highness)
  153. Niou Miya (Prince Niou) carried on an affair with Ukifune.
  154. Niou Miya celebrated the attainment of his manhood, becoming Hyobukyo (Minister of Hyobusho Ministry of Military), and lived in Nijoin, the residence of Murasaki no ue.
  155. Niou Miya gets married to Roku no Kimi (Yugiri's sixth daughter), and Naka no Kimi, who is pregnant, cannot help feeling anxious about the future.
  156. Niou Miya stops at Uji in spring, and exchanges poems with Naka no Kimi.
  157. Niou Miya took in her to Nijoin ('Agemaki' (Trefoil Knots) and 'Sawarabi' (Bracken Shoots)).
  158. Niou Miya was one of the chapter titles of "Genji Monogatari" (The Tale of Genji) which has fifty four chapters.
  159. Niou Miya' was an abbreviation for the original title, 'Niou Hyobukyo.'
  160. Niou Miya, who still cannot give up his attachment to Ukifune, discovers her residence through a letter from Naka no Kimi, and visits Uji pretending that Kaoru had an affair with Ukifune forcibly.
  161. Niou no Miya (Prince Niou): The third prince of the emperor regnant.
  162. Nioumiya began to spend more and more time with Naka no Kimi.
  163. Nioumiya decided to take Naka no kimi to the Nijoin (name of residence) in Kyoto.
  164. Nioumiya enjoys playing the game of go, sugoroku (Japanese backgammon) and the koto (a long Japanese zither with thirteen strings) with Kaoru and Yugiri's sons.
  165. Nioumiya kept visiting Naka no kimi for three days, but after that he could not visit Uji as he liked due to his social status.
  166. Nioumiya stopped visiting Uji, so Oigimi and Naka no kimi wailed about it.
  167. Nioumiya told Ukifune that he would receive her before that.
  168. Nioumiya was suspicious of Kaoru who was getting closer to Naka no miya.
  169. Nioumiya who found it difficult to go down to Uji invited her to Nijoin in Kyoto in early February.
  170. Nioumiya, a child between Kinjo no Mikado and Empress Akashi
  171. Nioumiya, who became impatient when he saw Kaoru was humming an old waka poem with Ukifune in his mind at the night of the court poetry reading, revisited Uji despite it snowing, abducted Ukifune to a hideaway located on the other side of the Yodo-gawa River and spent two days there.
  172. Nioumiya, who came back to his residence, wondered about lingering scent of Kaoru on Naka no Kimi, and tried to question her closely.
  173. Nippo Soshun
  174. Nippo Soshun (1368 - March 10, 1448) was a priest of the Rinzai Sect from the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan) to the middle of the Muromachi period.
  175. Nippon (Newspaper)
  176. Nippon Broadcasting System, Inc., which is a commercial broadcaster, broadcasts previously performance every day (junction - broadcasting), but, since April 1998, it broadcasts only before staring broadcasting on Monday, every week, and before 5:00 in the morning of Saturday.
  177. Nippon Daemon
  178. Nippon Danji (literally "A Son of Japan," a solo piece with lyrics by Ko TO [東郊])
  179. Nippon Decimal Classification has set, under middle classification '170 Shinto,' small classification '173 Shinto sacred classics.'
  180. Nippon Kenchiku Monyo Hoten (precious book of Japanese architecture pattern) published in 2003 by Bungeisha, edited by Toshitsugu SHIMIZU and Ken SASAKI.
  181. Nippon Kodo
  182. Nippon Luna Inc. - Nippon Ham Group
  183. Nippon Milk Community Co., Ltd., Kyoto Plant
  184. Nippon Pillar Packing Co., Ltd.
  185. Nippon Railway
  186. Nippon Railway constructed the line that ran through the Tohoku region from Ueno Station to Aomori Station (later Tohoku Main Line).
  187. Nippon Rent-A-Car Service, Inc.
  188. Nippon Senbaikosha (Japan Tobacco and Salt Public Corporation) Okayama KD-4 (a locomotive which was used on the company's dedicated line at Okayama Station)
  189. Nippon Shinyaku Co., Ltd.
  190. Nippon Shinyaku Co., Ltd., Head Office
  191. Nippon Suido-ko (Study on Water and Land of Japan)
  192. Nippon Valqua Industries, Ltd., Nara Office (in Techno-park Nara, Sumikawa-cho)
  193. Nippon Yakin Kogyo Co., Ltd.
  194. Nippon Yukata Rengokai (literally, the Joint Association of the Japanese Yukata Industry) instituted the day of yukata on July 7 after the custom of the Tanabata Star Festival (the festival of weavers) and Shokujo-sai (the festival for female weavers).
  195. Nippon no Uta (songs of Japan) (affiliated with Television Tokyo)
  196. Nipponkoku is different from Wakoku.'
  197. Niraku HAYASHIYA
  198. Nirakuso
  199. Nirakuso was the second house of Kozui OTANI, the 22nd chief priest of West Hongan-ji Temple, which he built in Mt. Rokko.
  200. Niramekko (outstaring game)
  201. Nirasaki City, Yamanashi Prefecture
  202. Nirayama Prefecture: established on June 29 (old lunar calendar) in 1868. ->X
  203. Nirazo: Komazo ICHIKAWA
  204. Nireisan (a former battlefield)
  205. Nirvana Garden: A dry landscape garden incorporating the scenery of Higashiyama (Kyoto Prefecture) with Mt. Daimonji and Me. Hiei.
  206. Nirvana is a fundamentally different notion from the phenomenon of posthumous transmigration and as represented by Shaka, human beings can live in the same world as before until their death even after awakening to Buddha since no special world is prepared for Buddha.
  207. Nirvana, which means awakening to Buddha through Satori (enlightenment), can be achieved while in life, and is not necessarily triggered simply by death.
  208. Nirvana-Symphony (Toshiro MAYUZUMI), a musical piece for orchestra and chorus that attempts to express the resonance of Bonsho using an orchestra.
  209. Nisai shishizo (inscribed in 1574): Owned by The Raku Museum
  210. Nise Monogatari (author unknown)
  211. Nise Murasaki Inaka Genji
  212. Nise-e (Realistic portraits of courtiers and warriors)
  213. Nise-e (realistic painting)
  214. Nise-e are realistic portrayals of courtiers and warriors, as well as drawings of armor on cattle and horses for record purposes, painted in the yamato-e style from the mid-13th century to mid-15th century.
  215. Nisee (Likeness Portraits)
  216. Nishi (west) Shin-en Garden
  217. Nishi (western) dozo
  218. Nishi Betsuin (Jodo Shinshu sect Hongan-ji school) was built in 1746 and Higashi Betsuin (Shinshu sect Otani school) in 1747 at the foot of Mt. Yoshizaki.
  219. Nishi Goza (Yahashira-no-mikogami - Yashimajinumi-no-kami, Itakeru-no-kami, Oyatsuhime-no-kami, Tsumatsuhime-no-kami, Otoshi-no-kami, Ukanomitama, Oyatsuhiko-no-kami, Suseribime)
  220. Nishi Gozen
  221. Nishi Hongan-ji Temple
  222. Nishi Hongan-ji Temple (Shimogyo Ward): Kara-mon Gate
  223. Nishi Hongan-ji Temple (commonly called Nishi Hongan-ji) (Shimogyo-ku, Kyoto City), 10497 branch temples
  224. Nishi Hongan-ji Temple is a Honzan (Head Temple) of the Hongan-ji branch of Jodo Shinshu (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) located in Shimogyo-ku Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  225. Nishi Hongan-ji Temple: Shimogyo Ward, Kyoto City
  226. Nishi Honganji Temple (head temple of Jodo Shinshu sect, Honganji-ha Buddhist), from Hanayacho to Kita-koji (the front faces the opposite Horikawa-dori Street)
  227. Nishi Hongwan-ji Temple
  228. Nishi Hongwan-ji Temple (Hongwan-ji Temple)
  229. Nishi Hongwan-ji Temple (Nishi Hongwan-ji): Kuro-shoin and Denro (two buildings), Shoin (Taimensho (a reception hall) and Shiro-shoin), Karamon (Chinese gate), Hiunkaku Pavilion and Kita Noh-butai Stage
  230. Nishi Koya-kaido Road
  231. Nishi Kyogoku-shinmeicho, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City: 54,289
  232. Nishi Maizuru Station/Naka Maizuru Station/Maizuru Office: It operates only boarding for up-bound (Maizuru - Kyoto) and only alighting for down-bound (Kyoto - Maizuru).
  233. Nishi Meihan Jidosha-do Horyu-ji interchange => Nara Kendo 5 Yamato Takada Karuga-sen => Koku-do (Route) 25 => Nara Kendo 9
  234. Nishi Nippon Expressway Company Limited, Ibaraki work office
  235. Nishi Nippon Expressway Company Limited, Kameoka Work Office
  236. Nishi Ohashi Bridge (Nishikyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture): 4.5 km
  237. Nishi honganji bon sanjurokunin kasyu (The works of the thirty-six master poets in Nishi Hongan-ji Temple) is the oldest existing copy of the summarization of poems of these 36 poets.
  238. Nishi no Kyo
  239. Nishi no Kyo, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City is located on the western area of Heian-kyo.
  240. Nishi no maru of Edo-jo Castle was burned down in 1873 and Akasaka Detached Palace was taken up as the temporary Kokyo.
  241. Nishi no maru sanju yagura and tsuzuki yagura (one structure)
  242. Nishi translated the book under the order from Yoshinobu TOKUGAWA but it was lost during the Battle of Toba-Fushimi, which occurred soon after the order.
  243. Nishi'
  244. Nishi' differs widely with 'Higashi' and 'Kita' in that "chiki chiki chin" is inserted between the 'Niriki' and 'Uta' part.
  245. Nishi' inserts the "chiki chiki chin" at every calling out, while 'Higashi' and 'Kita' inserts the same ceremonial rhythmic hand clapping.
  246. Nishi-Akashi Station was moved to the current place in June 1961 and the Takatori- Nishi-Akashi section became a quadruple-track section in March 1965.
  247. Nishi-Azai-cho
  248. Nishi-Betsuin and Higashi-Betsuin Route (there is no course number for this route)
  249. Nishi-Hamada Station (0.0 km) - Hamadako Station (2.3 km)
  250. Nishi-Hongan-ji Temple's Shoin-zukuri style architecture and Hiun-kaku Pavilion
  251. Nishi-Honganji-bon Sanju-rokunin-kashu (The Nishi Hongan-ji Collection of Thirty-Six Anthologies)
  252. Nishi-Honganji-bon sanju-rokunin-kashu is a decorative manuscript produced at the end of the Heian period that compiled the poems of Sanju-rokkasen (thirty-six famous poets).
  253. Nishi-Hongu Romon (two-storied gate of West Shrine)
  254. Nishi-Izumo - Masuda section (excluding the premises of Nishi-Izumo Station): Hamada Railway Department, Yonago Branch Office, West Japan Railway Company
  255. Nishi-Izumo Station westward and Senzaki Branch Line: Automatic block system (special)
  256. Nishi-Kizu Station
  257. Nishi-Kizu Station - Hosono Station - Shimokoma Station
  258. Nishi-Kizu Station - Katamachi Line (Gakkentoshi Line)
  259. Nishi-Kizu Station, Shimokoma Station, Kamitanabe Station and Osumi Station opened.
  260. Nishi-Kizu Station, located at 55 Saganaka Kawanoshiri, Kizugawa City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Katamachi Line, which is operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  261. Nishi-Maizuru
  262. Nishi-Maizuru Station
  263. Nishi-Maizuru Station (0.0 km) -- Maizuruko Station (freight depot) (1.8 km)
  264. Nishi-Maizuru Station - Higashi-Maizuru Station
  265. Nishi-Maizuru Station - Shisho Station
  266. Nishi-Maizuru Station - Shisho Station - Shinonome Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  267. Nishi-Maizuru Station is an aboveground station with one island platform and one single platform serving three tracks used by JR; in addition, a part of the opposite side of the single platform, which serves trains for Ayabe Station, has been cut away to create a single platform serving one track for the KTR Miyazu Line.
  268. Nishi-Maizuru Station used to be a fairly large and important station for Maizuru Railways Department, with many storage tracks, most of which were removed when the station was rebuilt as a raised station on September 25, 1999, and now only one (the Platform 1 mentioned earlier) remains.
  269. Nishi-Maizuru has a long history of commerce and quite a few people use this station for shopping as well as for commuting.
  270. Nishi-Maizuru is the western half of present Maizuru City.
  271. Nishi-Maizuru refers to the western half of Maizuru City that constitutes the castle town of Tanabe-jo Castle (Tango Province) (Maizuru-jo Castle) having a fine view of Mt. Atago as well as Kasa area.
  272. Nishi-Nihon Plant of Kenko Mayonnaise Co., Ltd.
  273. Nishi-Otesuji
  274. Nishi-honden (Western main shrine building)
  275. Nishi-hongu Haiden (the Hall of worship of West Shrine).
  276. Nishi-horikawa-dori Street is now wider because, during World War II, the houses along it were forced to move in order to provide a fire-blocking zone.
  277. Nishi-jinja Shrine (enshrining Munakata-Sanjojin as the main deity, but also including Ikichishimahime-no-Mikoto, Tagitsuhime-no-Mikoto and Tagorihime-no-Mikoto, the associated deities of Amenomikatsuhime-no-Mikoto, Enyahiko-no-Mikoto and Takitsuhiko-no-Mikoto)
  278. Nishi-maizuru Post Office: 624-08xx, 624-09xx, 624-85xx, 624-86xx, 624-87xx, 624-01xx
  279. Nishi-mon Gate
  280. Nishi-mon gate
  281. Nishi-mon gate (West gate): Relocated from Fushimi Momoyama-jo Castle in 1857
  282. Nishi-no-ko Lake
  283. Nishi-no-ma - Yahashira-no-mikogami
  284. Nishi-no-za - Harisainyo(uneme)
  285. Nishida did not use an approach that imported ideas or a philological approach, learned only ways of thinking of his predecessors, developed his ideas uniquely, and therefore, his works are original and difficult to understand at first sight.
  286. Nishida regarded pure experience as the solution for the fundamental issues of philosophy such as the confrontation between idealism and materialism, he stated that the unification of objective and subjective phenomena was the foundation of knowledge, ethics and religion.
  287. Nishigori claimed that Tomotane had been murdered with poison, and an autopsy was held.
  288. Nishigori family
  289. Nishigori sued the Soma family for illegal confinement and embezzlement of property.
  290. Nishigori-go (尓之古利)
  291. Nishigoza mikoshi: called Nishiki mikoshi
  292. Nishihongu (Daigu (Daihiei)) Oonamuchinokami
  293. Nishihongu Honden and Haiden (a hall of the offering and the worship), Higashihongu Honden and Haiden
  294. Nishiiya's Jindai-odori dance (May 4, 1976; Nishiiyayama-son, Miyoshi City; Jindai-odori Hozonkai [Jindai-odori Dance Preservation Association])
  295. Nishijima Island, located in the Sea of Harima
  296. Nishijin
  297. Nishijin Employment Security Office
  298. Nishijin Kenkokai Horikawa Hospital
  299. Nishijin Ori
  300. Nishijin Textile
  301. Nishijin Textile Center, Horikawa-Imadegawa Sagaru (to the south of Horikawa-Imadegawa)
  302. Nishijin and Nishijin ori are registered trade marks of 'Nishijin Textile Industrial Association.'
  303. Nishijin brocade
  304. Nishijin is still considered the highest-grade textile in Japan today.
  305. Nishijin is the name of a location in Kyoto, which was derived from the fact that the headquarters of the west camp (or Nishijin) had existed in this locale since the time of the Onin War.
  306. Nishijin ori is a general term for yarn-dyed fabrics made in Kyoto.
  307. Nishijin public job stabilization office, Nakadachiuri-dori Street
  308. Nishijin refers to the area covering Kamigyo and Kita Wards in Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  309. Nishijin' is not a street name.
  310. Nishijin' textiles gained overwhelming popularity among the rich townspeople, and experienced a golden age of popularity during the Genroku and Kyoho eras.
  311. Nishijin's textile technology developed from the Meiji era on with the introduction of the Jacquard loom imported from France, and two scrolls of the completed 'Genji Monogatari Emaki' were donated in 1995.
  312. Nishijin-ori Brocade
  313. Nishijinori (Nishijin brocade)
  314. Nishikawa family
  315. Nishikawa had an extraordinary physical strength.
  316. Nishikawa was born in 1854, as the second son of a farm family in present Meiwa-cho, Taki-gun, Mie Prefecture.
  317. Nishikawa was born in Haji Ward, Chizu Town in the eastern part of Tottori Prefecture.
  318. Nishikawa was sentenced to life in prison with work, and he was sent to the prison in his local Mie Prefecture.
  319. Nishiki (brocade) is also used as material, and such products are used for street clothes and semi formal dresses.
  320. Nishiki Market
  321. Nishiki NIIMI
  322. Nishiki NIIMI (1836 ? October 25, 1863?)
  323. Nishiki NIIMI: Died September 13, 1863 by seppuku (suicide by disembowelment)
  324. Nishiki Tenman-gu Shrine
  325. Nishiki Tenman-gu Shrine is a Shinto shrine located at Nishikikoji Street and Shin Kyogoku Street, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  326. Nishiki Tenman-gu Shrine was established as a guardian god shrine enshrining Tenman Tenjin at 'Kanki-ji Temple' which was founded in 1003 when 'Sugawara-in,' the former residence of SUGAWARA no Michizane's father SUGAWARA no Koreyoshi, was relocated to the site of MINAMOTO no Toru's mansion, 'Kawara no in.'
  327. Nishiki Tenmangu Shrine
  328. Nishiki Tenmangu Shrine, Shinkyogoku-dori Street
  329. Nishiki ebi, or Panulirus ornatus (Johan Christian Fabricius, 1798)
  330. Nishiki is sometimes used.
  331. Nishiki no mihata (The Imperial Standard)
  332. Nishiki-cho, Kuga County, Yamaguchi Prefecture (Yamaguchi Prefecture) (present Iwakuni City)
  333. Nishiki-e (colored woodblock print)
  334. Nishiki-e (woodblock prints in full color) gallery
  335. Nishiki-e prints by Honen were realistically painted in detail including even the background, and the portions for text and nishiki-e prints were clearly separated from each other.
  336. Nishiki-e-shinbun
  337. Nishiki-e-shinbun and similar publications in other areas
  338. Nishiki-e-shinbun as a medium
  339. Nishiki-e-shinbun featured this 'shinbun' as its subject matter and worked out its expression for even the general public who could only read hiragana (one of the two types of phonograms of Japanese language) to be able to understand the shinbun through pictures and easy words.
  340. Nishiki-e-shinbun had a strong 'news-reporting feature' of which ukiyo-e prints' characteristics had.
  341. Nishiki-e-shinbun in Osaka
  342. Nishiki-e-shinbun in Tokyo
  343. Nishiki-e-shinbun is sometimes called shinbun-nishiki-e noting the nishiki-e in it as a graphic work.
  344. Nishiki-e-shinbun was a medium which popularized shinbun in the period when the modern journalism rose to power.
  345. Nishiki-e-shinbun was a medium which reported sensational incidents using a type of graphic work that was nishiki-e, and it has been said that 'its bizarre and sensational content' has 'a character similar to that of today's photography weekly magazines'.
  346. Nishiki-e-shinbun was welcomed as a souvenir of Tokyo similarly to 'shinbun'.
  347. Nishiki-e-shinbun was welcomed due to 'the novelty of its ideas and style, and its character featuring mainly gossip' and was very popular among the general public who had been away from newspapers.
  348. Nishiki-e-shinbun were also published in Osaka and Kyoto.
  349. Nishiki-e-version 'Asano Shinbun'
  350. Nishiki-e-version 'Kabuki Shinpo' (new kabuki newspaper)
  351. Nishiki-e-version 'Kana-yomi Shinbun'
  352. Nishiki-e-version 'Tokyo-maiyu' (every evening in Tokyo) Shinbun
  353. Nishiki-e-version 'Tokyo-nichinichi Shinbun' was produced based on a daily paper 'Tokyo-nichinichi Shinbun'.
  354. Nishiki-e-version 'Yubin-hochi Shinbun' produced based on a daily paper, Yubin-hochi Shinbun.
  355. Nishiki-ga Hyakuji Shinbun': Nishiki-e-shinbun which had the widest circulation in Osaka.
  356. Nishiki-ga Shinbun': This is a reduced-size version.
  357. Nishikigaura (Atami City, Shizuoka Prefecture)
  358. Nishikigi
  359. Nishikikoji-cho
  360. Nishikikoji-dori Street
  361. Nishikikoji-dori Street is one of the major east-west streets in Kyoto City.
  362. Nishikikoji-dori Street, where Nishiki Market is located, runs parallel to the main street of Kyoto (Shijo-dori Street) one block north of Shijo-dori Street, and the path is paved with stones and is covered with a vivid arcade of red, green, and yellow, and is 390 meters long from east to west.
  363. Nishikiori bugyo (magistrate) status, Omotegoban, 250 bales, 180 out of 250 bales tashidaka Chojuro Hidechika YASUI (52).
  364. Nishikiori bugyo status, Rokube MOTOSUGI.
  365. Nishikoji-dori Street
  366. Nishikoji-dori Street is one of the streets in Kyoto running in the north-south direction.
  367. Nishikoji-dori Street, Nishioji-dori Street, Senbon-dori Street, Omiya-dori Street, Horikawa-dori Street, Karasuma-dori Street and Kawaramachi-dori Street
  368. Nishikubo Village was later incorporated to Toyohara Village due to the enforcement of the Town and Village System, and the name changed to Aza-Ikusagawa.
  369. Nishikubo fought as commander of frontline troops, and on October 13, occupied the eastern highland of Shaoda mountain range, and on October 26, attacked the southern highland of Waitoushan (in present China).
  370. Nishikubo was ordered to go to the front as adjutant of regiment and on February 16 departed.
  371. Nishikubo's earnest attitude was recognized and received the honor that Major General Maresuke NOGI, who was chief of the 1st Infantry Brigade at that time, visited the company to watch the operations directly.
  372. Nishikubo's name remained in the name of Nishikubo Station of Hoshin Line of Karafuto National Railways, and after the Town System was enforced on Toyohara, the area the old Nishikubo Village had been was named again 'Nishikubo' belonging to Toyohara-cho Town.
  373. Nishikujo Kitanouchi-cho was originally a part of Nishikujo in Ouchi village.
  374. Nishikuma Valley
  375. Nishikyo Takatsuki Line of the Kyoto and Osaka Prefectural Route 67 (Mozume Kaido Road)
  376. Nishikyo Ward
  377. Nishikyo Ward Office
  378. Nishikyo Ward Office, 600-700 meters
  379. Nishikyo Ward in Kyoto City, Ukyo Ward in Kyoto City, and Nantan City
  380. Nishikyo Ward is one of the eleven wards that constitute Kyoto City.
  381. Nishikyo Ward, Kyoto City
  382. Nishikyo Ward: The ward located in the western Kyoto City.
  383. Nishikyogoku Elementary School, Kyoto City
  384. Nishikyogoku Hinotsume-cho
  385. Nishikyogoku Kindergarten (To-ji Gakuen school corporation)
  386. Nishikyogoku Kori Tsukisu-cho
  387. Nishikyogoku Sports Center-mae Bus Stop of Kyoto Bus
  388. Nishikyogoku Station
  389. Nishikyogoku Station - Saiin Station - Omiya Station
  390. Nishikyogoku Station is an elevated station with two platforms serving two tracks; the station is on the banking.
  391. Nishikyogoku Station is located at the intersection between Nishikyogoku-oji Street and Hankyu Kyoto Line, and around the station is Nishi Kyogoku, the area surrounded by Gojo-dori Street, Hachijo-dori Street, Katsura River, and Nishitakase-gawa River.
  392. Nishikyogoku Station, located in Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City, is a stop on the Hankyu Kyoto Line, which is operated by the Hankyu Railway.
  393. Nishikyogoku Undokoen-mae Bus Stop of Kyoto City Bus
  394. Nishime (braised vegetables)
  395. Nishime (konishime) recipe
  396. Nishime (the traditional Japanese simmered dish)
  397. Nishime (煮しめ) is a dish in which a simmering cooking technique is used.
  398. Nishime is also written as '煮染め' or '煮締め' and is also called 'onishime.'
  399. Nishime is served not only as an everyday meal but also for feasts served at occasions such as the Obon festival (Festival of the Dead or Buddhist All Soul's Day), New Year's holidays, seasonal festivals and other festivals where many people are assembled and guests are welcomed with food.
  400. Nishime is sometimes eaten as a topping on rice.
  401. Nishimonai Bon-odori dance (January 21, 1981; Ugo-machi, Ogachi County; Nishimonai Bonodori Hozonkai [Nishimonai Bon-odori Dance Preservation Association])
  402. Nishimonai soba (Ugo-machi)
  403. Nishimotomezuka-kofun Tumulus (Hyogo Prefecture)
  404. Nishimotomezuka-kofun Tumulus (Nada Ward, Kobe City, Hyogo Prefecture, zenpo-koho (square front, square back mound)
  405. Nishimuko Station
  406. Nishimuko Station - Higashimuko Station - Rakusaiguchi Station
  407. Nishimuko Station is an aboveground station with two platforms serving two tracks.
  408. Nishimuko Station, located in Muko City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Hankyu Kyoto Line, which is operated by the Hankyu Railway.
  409. Nishimura departed but came back because his plane broke down, and Sen never departed, so they were the only two from the corps who survived.
  410. Nishin soba (buckwheat noodles in hot soup with cooked herring on top)
  411. Nishin soba, buckwheat noodles in hot soup with stewed herring on top, is available in the areas such as Kyoto City.
  412. Nishin-goten (herring castles) remaining along the coast of the Sea of Japan can be regarded as a type of banya.
  413. Nishin-kazunoko-sake-ikura (Ikedaya)
  414. Nishinaka Otani - Yagimoto (Totsukawa Village) - National Highway 425
  415. Nishinakasuji-dori Street
  416. Nishinakasuji-dori Street is one of the streets in Kyoto.
  417. Nishino Higashiyama' town is a detached town in the mountain area, at the south-east end of the ward.
  418. Nishinoin-ryu simplified lineage (founder, Shinsho (信証)): Kukai - Shinga - Gennin - Yakushin - Kanpyo Hoo (Emperor Uda) - Kancho - Saishin - Shoshin - Kanjo - Shinsho
  419. Nishinokami: Please refer to the section of Naishi no tsukasa (female palace attendants).
  420. Nishinokyo
  421. Nishinokyo Emmachi
  422. Nishinokyo Hara-machi, Nakagyo-ku Ward (Ichigoro-jinja Shrine on Odoi)
  423. Nishinokyo Hiogi-cho:
  424. Nishinokyo area
  425. Nishinokyo-cho, Nara City is located west of Heijo-kyo.
  426. Nishinomaru
  427. Nishinomaru Roju was not engaged in the affairs of the bakufu but was solely responsible for housekeeping of Ogosho (leading or influential figure) or the heir of Shogun who resided in Nishinomaru.
  428. Nishinomiya-kitaguchi operation section (Kobe Line)
  429. Nishinomiyanajio Station and Shin-Sanda Station began operating.
  430. Nishinorikura-kofun Tumulus: A keyhole-shaped mound, which is thought that was constructed in the late Kofun period (the early sixth century.)
  431. Nishinotoin-dori Street
  432. Nishinotoin-guchi
  433. Nishinouchi-gami is a yellowish brown thick paper made of pure kozo in the Nishinouchi, Naka-gun, Hitachi Province in the upper reaches of the Kuji-gawa River, it is sturdy and can be preserved for a long period.
  434. Nishinoya type (one variety of basic type, rectangular-shaped ishi-doro)
  435. Nishio Domain: Nishio-jo Castle
  436. Nishio-Tencha, Asuke-kancha, Shinshiro-cha, Miyazaki-bancha and Mikawa-cha (Aichi Prefecture).
  437. Nishioji Oike Station, on the Tozai Line of Kyoto Municipal Subway (approximately 400 meters north of this station)
  438. Nishioji Shijo
  439. Nishioji Station
  440. Nishioji Station - (JR Katsura Station) - Mukomachi Station
  441. Nishioji Station - Mukomachi Station - Nagaokakyo Station
  442. Nishioji Station, located in Karahashi-nishi-hiragaki-cho, Minami Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a railway station of the Tokaido Main Line (JR Kyoto Line) that is operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  443. Nishioji-Eki (station)-Mae
  444. Nishioji-Sanjo Station
  445. Nishioji-Sanjo Station on the Arashiyama Main Line of the Keifuku Electric Railroad (about 400 meters to the south)
  446. Nishioji-Sanjo Station, located in Saiin-imayamada-cho, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Arashiyama Main Line, which is operated by Keifuku Electric Railroad Co., Ltd.
  447. Nishioji-Sanjo Station, on the Arashiyama Main Line operated by Keifuku Electric Railroad: Approximately 15 minutes on foot
  448. Nishioji-dori Oike Station was opened halfway at the crossing with Nishioji-dori Street.
  449. Nishioji-dori Street
  450. Nishioji-dori Street, Senbon-dori Street, Omiya-dori Street, Horikawa-dori Street, Karasuma-dori Street and Kawaramachi-dori Street
  451. Nishioji-oike Station
  452. Nishioji-oike Station (T16) - Uzumasa-tenjingawa Station (T17)
  453. Nishioji-oike Station, located in the Nakagyo ward of Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Tozai Line of the Kyoto Municipal Subway.
  454. Nishiotani Honbyo Mausoleum (Otani Honbyo Mausoleum of Hongan-ji Temple, of the Honganji group of the Jodoshin-shu sect)
  455. Nishioumi-ji Road
  456. Nishioumi-ji Road is a highway that stretches from Oumi Province (Shiga Prefecture) to Echizen Province, and was the road connecting Hokuriku area in the ancient and middle ages.
  457. Nishisami-jinja Shrine
  458. Nishisataura-cho, Kagoshima City has an annual folklore event in spring called 'Tanokami Onaori,' in which Tanokami given an elaborate makeup is carried outdoor for a cherry blossom viewing party and is transferred.
  459. Nishita (western part of Old Mikata, Old Nishita-mura)
  460. Nishitakase-gawa River
  461. Nishitakase-gawa River is a class A river in the Yodo-gawa River system running in Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  462. Nishitetsu-Gojo Station - a station in Dazaifu City, Fukuoka Prefecture on the Nishitetsu Dazaifu Line
  463. Nishitonotsuka-kofun Tumulus (a large keyhole-shaped tomb mound in Nakayama Town, Tenri City, Nara Prefecture)
  464. Nishitonotsuka-kofun Tumulus (also known as Nishitonozuka-kofun Tumulus) is a large keyhole-shaped tomb mound in early Kofun period (Tumulus period) in Nakayama Town, Tenri City, Nara Prefecture.
  465. Nishiure Dengaku Dance (May 04, 1976, Shizuoka Prefecture)
  466. Nishiure's dengaku (May 4, 1976; Nishiura, Misakubo-cho, Tenryu Ward, Hamamatsu City; Nishiure Dengaku Hozonkai [Nishiure Dengaku Preservation Association])
  467. Nishiyama Honmon-ji Temple
  468. Nishiyama Honmon-ji Temple (independent)
  469. Nishiyama Honmon-ji Temple did not approve Kechimyaku Sojo from Nikko to Nichimoku but instead split away, claiming the legitimacy of Nichidai based on "Hattsu Yuzurijo (eight notes that document the will to transfer the property or possession to the offspring or disciples)."
  470. Nishiyama Honmon-ji Temple joined Nichiren Sho Sect alone by honzan temple itself in March 1957.
  471. Nishiyama Sanka (MA course): Matsunoo Taisha Shrine, Shoji-ji Temple (Hana no tera Temple), Oharano Jinja Shrine, Shobo-ji Temple (Nishikyo Ward, Kyoto City), Jurin-ji Temple (Kyoto City) (Narihira-dera Temple), Yoshimine-dera Temple, Yoshimine no sato Nishiyama Bento (lunch box)
  472. Nishiyama Tumulus: Constructed in the early Kofun period (tumulus period).
  473. Nishiyama-kofun Tumulus (Nara Prefecture)
  474. Nishiyama-kofun Tumulus (a tumulus in Somanouchi Town, Tenri City, Nara Prefecture)
  475. Nishiyama-kofun Tumulus is a tumulus in Somanouchi Town, Tenri City, Nara Prefecture, and designated as the national historic site.
  476. Nishiyamakanshoji Co., Ltd. (Supermarket NISHIYAMA)
  477. Nishiyamakoryu-ji Temple Pagoda (Saijo City, Ehime Prefecture), Important Cultural Property
  478. Nishiyamazuka Tumulus
  479. Nishiyoshino Onsen Hot Spring
  480. Nishiyoshino Onsen Hot Spring has a long history, and it is said the in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan), the Emperors stopped in to get rid of travel fatigue on their way to Yoshino.
  481. Nishiyoshino Onsen Hot Spring is a hot spring which is located in Jodo, Nishiyoshino Town, Gojo City, Nara Prefecture (former Nishi-yoshino Village) (Yamato Province, old province).
  482. Nishiyoshion Onsen Hot Spring
  483. Nishizaka Route
  484. Nishizaka-Tadewara Line of the Kyoto Prefectural Route 493
  485. Nishoji Domain
  486. Nishonshoki mentions the story that ONO no Imoko lost the sovereign's reply, but "Suishu" does not ("Suishu" does not even mention ONO no Imoko).
  487. Nishu Kuyo (Kuyo with two elements)
  488. Nishu gin
  489. Nishu gin silver is a kind of silver coin circulated in Japan in the end of Edo period.
  490. Nishukin
  491. Nishukin is a kind of gold coin distributed in the Edo period.
  492. Nishushigyo (the way to the two truths and the methods for four practices)
  493. Nison-in (lit. Two Images Temple) derives its name from the fact that there are two principal image statues; Hokke no Shaka and Raigei no Amida.
  494. Nison-in Temple
  495. Nison-in Temple is a Tendai Sect Buddhist temple located in Sagano, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  496. Nison-in Temple is said to have been constructed in the early Heian period between 834 and 847 by Ennin (Jikaku Daishi) under the order of Emperor Saga.
  497. Nisonin (Ukyo Ward): So-mon Gate
  498. Nisonin Temple
  499. Nissaka-shuku Station on Tokai-do Road, old hatago 'Kawazakaya' (Kakegawa City, Shizuoka Prefecture)
  500. Nissaka-shuku Station on Tokai-do Road, old hatago 'Yorozuya' (Kakegawa City, Shizuoka Prefecture)
  501. Nissan CIMA, Nissan FUGA, TOYOTA Century, TOYOTA Celsior, TOYOTA Crown Majesta, TOYOTA Crown (Royal series/Athlete), TOYOTA MARK X, HONDA LEGEND, etc.
  502. Nissan Konzern Group
  503. Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., Higashi-Maizuru Office
  504. Nissan Prince Royal was introduced as the fifth goryosha in 1967.
  505. Nissan Technical School Kyoto
  506. Nissei
  507. Nissei (March 23, 1623 - March 30, 1668) was a Buddhist monk of the Nichiren sect and a poet of Chinese poetry who lived in the early Edo period.
  508. Nissei Express
  509. Nissei left many writings of his own and revisions of others' writings.
  510. Nisseki-ji Temple Magaibutsu
  511. Nisseki-ji Temple in Toyama: The seated statue of Fudo Myoo (carved into a tough face) (Heian period, an important cultural property)
  512. Nissha Printing: a corner of Shijo-dori Street
  513. Nisshin
  514. Nisshin (1407 - October 30, 1488) was a priest of the Nichiren Sect in the Muromachi period.
  515. Nisshin (1561 - 1617) was a high priest of the Nichiren sect of Buddhism during the periods of Warring States (in Japan) and Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  516. Nisshin (1565 - May 17, 1626) was a monk of the Nichiren Sect of Buddhism from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the Edo period.
  517. Nisshin (of the Nichiren Sect of Buddhism)
  518. Nisshin and Fujufuse-gi
  519. Nisshin began street preaching at Ichijo Modori-bashi Bridge in Kyoto (1427), however, other sects, including Enryaku-ji Temple on Mt. Hiei and the Rinzai Sect, embraced by the shogunate family severely oppressed his activities.
  520. Nisshin is rewarded for his efforts by being appointed head priest.
  521. Nisshin merged it with Jogyo-in Temple and Juhon-ji Temple to establish Yobo-ji Temple in 1550.
  522. Nisshin was kaisan (a founder of temple as the first chief priest) of Kumamoto Honmyo-ji Temple (now in Kumamoto City).
  523. Nisshin's activities
  524. Nisshin, who made various temples convert to the Nichiren Sect, advocated almsgiving of other sects when he had the opportunity to preach to the sixth Shogun, Yoshinori ASHIKAGA, and as a result, he was forbidden to propose to the government.
  525. Nisshinbon (book by Nisshin, also known as Nichiyobon)
  526. Nissho
  527. Nissho (1562 to May 17, 1622) was the 15th head priest of Taiseki-ji Temple.
  528. Nissho (1829 - 1908) was a priest of the Nichiren sect (Fujufuse school) of the end of the Edo period to the Meiji period.
  529. Nissho (Fujufuse school)
  530. Nissho Shonin--a grandson of Suketsune KUDO, who was killed in the revenge of the Soga Brothers--founded a temple as a Hokke-ji Temple at the site where Suketsune's residence had been located.
  531. Nisshoku (Gesshoku) Ohanjin
  532. Nisshu
  533. Nisshu (January 8, 1556 to September 16, 1617) was the 14th head priest of Taiseki-ji Temple.
  534. Nisshu (Yaemon KINOSHITA's daughter, Hideyoshi's older sister, Yoshifusa MIYOSHI's wife)
  535. Nisshu (born in 1534 and died on May 26, 1625) was a woman who lived from the Warring States period (in Japan) (the late Muromachi period) until the early Edo period.
  536. Nisshu became a nun and erected Zuiryuji Temple in Sagano, Kyoto (Omi-Hachiman City as it is known today). (Ama-monzeki--a temple whose head has always been a female born from the imperial family or from the nobility.) and later transferred to Murakumo and held a service for Hidetsugu, praying to Buddha for his happiness.
  537. Nisshu died on April 20 (according to the lunar calendar), 1625.
  538. Nisshu had Onda-hime (Oden-hime), her great-granddaughter and the fifth daughter of Nobushige SANADA, take refuge at her residence at the time of the downfall of the Hashiba Family resulting from the Summer Battle of Osaka in 1615.
  539. Nisshu married Yasuke MIWA, a farmer who called himself a relative of the Miwa Family in Yamato Province and renamed himself Yoshifusa MIWA later, and gave birth to Hidetsugu (1568), Hidekatsu (1569) and Hideyasu (1579).
  540. Nisshu's husband, Yoshifusa, was implicated in Hidetsugu's suicide and was exiled to Sanuki Province.
  541. Nisso Boeki (Japan-Sung Trade)
  542. Nisso Konzern Group
  543. Nisso boeki was the trade done between Japan and the Sung Dynasty (Southern Sung Dynasty) in China.
  544. Nisso is the fourth progenitor.
  545. Nisson was the fourth founding member of the Nichiren Honshu Sect after the original founder Nichiren, Nikko the second and Nichimoku the third.
  546. Nisuiei
  547. Nitabe no himemiko (Princess Nitabe)
  548. Nitabe no himemiko (year of birth unknown - October 26, 699) was a princess of the Emperor Tenchi.
  549. Nitayama pongee
  550. Nite-soro Koyasan kara detaru imo (What I boiled is a potato dug out in Mt. Koya)
  551. Niten Ichi-ryu, the school established by Musashi MIYAMOTO, is the most famous among the Japanese sword art schools that emphasize two-sword fencing in Japan.
  552. Niten-mon Gate
  553. Niten-mon Gate (important cultural property)
  554. Niten-mon Gate, the main hall, and the three-storied pagoda are located several hundred meters up the stone steps from Myojuin.
  555. Nitenmon Gate Ruins - Once there used to be Nitenmon Gates south front of the main hall (Zao-do Hall), although they no longer exist.
  556. Nito Gakushu (students of the second rank)
  557. Nito-ryu
  558. Nito-ryu (two-sword style)
  559. Nito-ryu is not prohibited by the Kendo rules in principle, but today it is all but abolished.
  560. Nito-ryu was only shown at official competitions held in 1961, 1963 and 2007.
  561. Nitobe had meetings with educators there and found the loss of religious education in Japan and as a result he published "Bushido" in English in 1900.
  562. Nitobe pointed out that while people could easily become individualistic which underlied mammonism and materialism in modern times, samurais in the feudal period recognized themselves as an existence that was responsible to the whole (feudal) society.
  563. Nitoshinkage-ryu school of kusarigama jutsu (founded during the Taisho period)
  564. Nitrite-nitrogen and nitrate-nitrogen
  565. Nitta clan
  566. Nitta clan is a Gozoku (local ruling family) originated in Kozuke Province.
  567. Nitta clan is the origin of such clans as Yamana, Serada, Satomi, Nukata, Wakiya, Odachi, Horiguchi and Yura.
  568. Nitta clan's soryo-shiki (clan leadership rights) was confiscated and awarded to one of its families, Serada clan, which was shared by the Iwamatsu clan, as well as the Serada clan.
  569. Nitta forces crossed the Tamagawa River on the following day, fighting a decisive battle with Yasuie Hojo of the bakufu forces at Kasumi no seki (Sekido, Tama City, Tokyo) which culminated in a great victory (Sekido War).
  570. Nitta forces further advanced on Kamakura kaido, crossing the Iruma River (Saitama Prefecture) and clashed with the forces of bakufu commanded by Sadakuni SAKURADA and Sadamasa KANAZAWA at Kotesashigahara (Kotesashi-cho, Tokorozawa City, Saitama Prefecture) (Battle at Kotesashigahara).
  571. Nitta forces suffered a crushing defeat, but came back to defeat the bakufu forces on the following day with the support of troops from Yoshikatsu OTAWA of the Miura clan.
  572. Nitta no Ki, about 737, unknown, Nitta gun, the presumed former site of Nitta no Ki
  573. Nitta no sho estate, Kozuke Province, and Mitsuzumi IWAMATSU who was an illegitimate child of Yoshimune succeeded to the family estate.
  574. Nitta' in the name of Musashi Nitta Station on the Tokyu Tamagawa Line is derived from Nitta-jinja Shrine that worships Nitta Daimyo-jin (the Great God).
  575. Nitta's army was unable to raise a navy, so established its headquarters in Nihonmatsu (between Wadamisaki and Egenoyama) and also deployed the forces of Yoshisuke WAKIYA and Ujiaki ODACHI in Wadamisaki in preparation for the naval landing.
  576. Nitta's army which was met by Takauji's army on the return eastward began a retreat but Akamatsu's forces commenced pursuit and Nitta's army fled among mass betrayal and surrender to the Ashikaga army.
  577. Nitta's forces started to withdraw when they were informed of Takauji's forces heading east.
  578. Nitta's forces suffered a debacle with the pursuit of Akamatsu's forces that came out from Shirahata-jo Castle; Nitta managed to escape to Hyogo.
  579. Nitta-jinja Shrine came under the direct control of the Imperial Household Agency in 1914,
  580. Nitta-no-sho
  581. Nitten (the sun) (wSurya,Aditya)
  582. Nittensuishu
  583. Nitto (sending messengers from Japan to Tang)
  584. Nitto Guho (entering Tang and seeking after Buddhism)
  585. Nitto Seiko Co., Ltd.
  586. Nittoboeki (trade between Japan and Tang dynasty China)
  587. Nittoboeki (日唐貿易) is the trade that was carried on between Japan and Tang dynasty China.
  588. Nittsu Shonin-zo (portrait of Abbot Nittsu Shonin) (Honpo-ji Temple, Kyoto) Important Cultural Property 1608
  589. Niutsuhime-jinja Shrine
  590. Niwabi
  591. Niwabi (garden fire) is a piece of music used for the court kagura (sacred Shinto music and dancing performed in the Imperial Court).
  592. Niwaka (an impromptu comic play)
  593. Niwaka (written in Chinese characters as 俄) is an impromptu comic play that was performed at banquets or on the streets in the Edo/Meiji periods.
  594. Niwaka Ochi
  595. Niwaka is said to have developed as an occupation in Osaka from early on, where there were a number of professional niwakashi (niwaka performer) in the Tenpo era.
  596. Niwatori
  597. Niwatori (The Chicken) ("Subaru," August 1909).
  598. Niwatori hoko (decorative float associated with Chinese historical fact)
  599. Niwazashiki (literally, garden zashiki)
  600. Niyo HIGUCHI wrote that Yoshiiku was at the height of his prosperity in the Bunkyu and Keio eras.
  601. Nizaemon KATAOKA
  602. Nizaemon KATAOKA (XIII)
  603. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the 11th)
  604. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the 12th)
  605. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the 13th)
  606. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the 13th), who was not able to forget great performances by Nizaemon KATAOKA (the 11th) who played Katsumoto and by Uzaemon ICHIMURA who played Shigenari, performed 'Nagara zutsumi' with his son Takao (present Nizaemon KATAOKA) at Tenryu-ji Temple in the 1960's.
  607. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the 14th)
  608. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the 15th)
  609. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the eighth)
  610. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the fifth) (year of birth and death unknown)
  611. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the first)
  612. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the fourth)
  613. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the ninth)
  614. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the second) (year of birth and death unknown)
  615. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the seventh)
  616. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the sixth)
  617. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the tenth)
  618. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the third) (year of birth and death unknown)
  619. Nizaemon KATAOKA (the thirteenth) showed the best performance in that sense.
  620. Nizaemon KATAOKA XII (junidaime) moved to Tokyo to cover the shortage of tateoyama in Tokyo.
  621. Nizaemon KATAOKA is a Kabuki (traditional drama performed by male actors) actor's professional name.
  622. Nizaemon KATAOKA, who often played the roles of Honzo and Yuranosuke, favored Act Nine, and he appreciated the sense of color as follows.
  623. Nizaemon's desire to perform 'Nagara zutsumi' together with Takao at least once on a theater stage was achieved in run-through performances at National Theater in November 1988.
  624. Nizaemon, who had taken part in a spectacular show announcing the succession to Danjuro ICHIKAWA XI in Tokyo Kabuki-za in January 1962, also experienced the small audience for the performance at Minami-za in April and was shocked at the depressing conditions of Kansai Kabuki.
  625. Nizaki Fishing Port
  626. Nizaki is located on the eastern edge of the Tango Peninsula.
  627. No 'Kodama' runs across the boundary between the Tokaido section and the Sanyo section.
  628. No 'bushi' was referred to during the time of TAIRA no Masakado and FUJIWARA no Hidesato.
  629. No (spatula)
  630. No Buddha could reach enlightenment as Buddha without ultimately depending on Amidabutsu.
  631. No Ekiben (lunch boxes available at some stations and on some trains) or other items are available on the platform, but there is a kiosk, a coffee shop, an Ekiben shop and the Maizuru city tourist information center outside the ticket gate.
  632. No Jikimiyake were established because among his five sons, four died young, leaving only Emperor Taisho.
  633. No Platform number is displayed.
  634. No Platform numbers are displayed.
  635. No Race Days
  636. No Sankakubuchi Shinjukyo Mirrors have been discovered in China and Chinese scholars say that it is not Chinese.
  637. No Sankakubuchi Shinjukyo Mirrors were left in China because it was specially made for theYamatai-Koku kingdom.
  638. No Taiwanese was assigned as the principal of the junior high school under the old system of education, and only 4 people were assumed the place of the principal in the national elementary school (in an educational system operated in Japan between 1941 and 1947) and branch school.
  639. No activity at present.
  640. No activity suggesting belief in omens, such as those described above, is conducted.
  641. No actual calendar based on Genkareki exists even in China, so the said mokkan is a very valuable material.
  642. No additional tomb guards were provided.'
  643. No admission fee is required.
  644. No age limit was applied to the post.
  645. No announcement is made for the number of cars of incoming trains, either for inbound trains or outbound trains.
  646. No bamboo sword with a sharp blade can be made without using a sharp knife.
  647. No blood relationship existed between him and Seishiro ITAGAKI, who had held various posts including Minister of the Army.
  648. No buildings of the Shuden-zukuri style have survived from that time and its characteristics can only be surmised from existing related documents.
  649. No bus route enters Hankyu Nishimuko Station.
  650. No bus route operates via Fushimi-momoyama Station.
  651. No bus route stops at Keihan-Tanbabashi Station.
  652. No bus routes operate out of this station.
  653. No bus service is available in front of Keihan Fushimi-inari Station.
  654. No business office that has been downgraded to a branch office or branch station is included.
  655. No chance for excuse was given to them.
  656. No changes were made in regard to holidays, and the limited express and express trains were operated with 15-minute intervals.
  657. No characters are engraved on that stone, and it is believed that touching the stone would bring that person divine punishment.
  658. No chemical condiments are used.
  659. No choice of meals
  660. No chopstick rest is used and the chopsticks are put on the edge of the lacquered wooden tray.
  661. No clear picture about the Wakoku War has been unraveled.
  662. No colors other than red were used in Kinai region (the five capital provinces surrounding the ancient capitals of Nara and Kyoto), however, various colors were applied on the Keisho Haniwa (clay figure in the shape of human or beast) in Kanto region.
  663. No competitors existed for the Keihin-Tohoku Line other than the Keikyu Main Line, which ran side by side with the Keihin-Tohoku Line on the Shinagawa-Yokohama section.
  664. No conclusion has been reached on the origin of the name and style/type.
  665. No conclusion has been reached yet on the differences between the surviving fragments of the Tensho and this complete version.
  666. No consensus has been reached on this matter among the authorities concerned.
  667. No consistent testimony was given at the trial of the Kawamata Incident.
  668. No copper coins followed after Kangen-taiho, partly due to weakening power and dignity of the Imperial Courts.
  669. No counterargument was proposed, and because this was also supported by a study published by Junji IENAGA, it has become the accepted theory.
  670. No crossing with roads is provided to prevent the trains from colliding with vehicles (for the regular railways where mini-Shinkansen are operated, the number of crossings are reduced, with safety measures strengthened as well).
  671. No daimyo blocked this.
  672. No date recoded: transferred to Samanokami (Captain of the Left Division of Samaryo).
  673. No date recorded: transferred to Sahyonoe-no-kami (head of Sahyoefu).
  674. No description is found in "Kojiki" regarding sacred treasures (Jingi) or the equivalent hoken (treasured sword) for enthronement.
  675. No detailed reports were kept.
  676. No details are known about his origin.
  677. No directly-managed overseas temples of the school are included.
  678. No eggs or cabbage are added to this tare katsudon, which is no more complicated than a tenpura rice bowl.
  679. No eligibility requirement (anyone who can take the test at the designated test site. those who want to take the First Level need to have passed the Second Level)
  680. No entry fee.
  681. No evidence has been found to confirm or deny the supposition as to whether the author applied the names or not.
  682. No excavation from the top of the hill is probably an important clue to revealing the purpose of dotaku and their religious status although this fact gets less attention.
  683. No exceptions were made for Imperial Princesses and Princess who became consorts to Imperial Princes and Princes.
  684. No existing piece of his work has been identified.
  685. No expressway exists in the city.
  686. No fancy words can describe the natural scenery.
  687. No farce side: Residents living in front of the Ishiyama-dera Temple gate
  688. No fight actually broke out during this escape and no records were kept of Okuni's later actions.
  689. No food is therefore offered in the interrogation room where he might devise an escape by throwing a bento at the detective and catching him off guard.
  690. No functions in the government are given, except for ones provided by the Constitution.
  691. No generic name of this battle, fought in Gyotokuguchi, Konodai and Sunozaki, is mentioned in the original novel but researchers call it 'the great battle of Kanto' or 'the war against (Kanto) Kanrei.'
  692. No heraldry or thread flower was attached.
  693. No heraldry was used for the elderly.
  694. No hereditary title was given.
  695. No high officers were dispatched to Sakhalin nor appointed since then, and Sakhalin Development Commissioner was abolished on August 7, 1871.
  696. No historical materials that directly backs up the existence of `Crown of Na province' are available.
  697. No historical records about Takeie no Okimi have been found other than the article in "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan) mentioned above.
  698. No historical records are existing from the end of the Heian period to the Muromachi period.
  699. No imperial prince was born afterwards and Emperor Sanjo had to resign his throne due to pressure from Michinaga and passed away soon after.
  700. No information on her later life has been found and the age of her death is unknown.
  701. No information on his later life has been found.
  702. No ivory tally remains, and its existence was only confirmed by documents.
  703. No kubungen should be supplied to a person of five years old or younger.
  704. No large collection of her poems including the line of personal collections of poetry remains today.
  705. No later than May and June, 1585, Akizane NIJO, Nobusuke KONOE, Harusue KIKUTEI, and Hideyoshi HASHIBA are believed to have been each awarded Kanpaku, Sadaijin, Udaijin, and Naidaijin.
  706. No laws governing the conduct of 'Mujin' have existed to the present.
  707. No less than ten men spoke to him at a time, but it is said that Umayado no Miko correctly understood them, and judged their words and answered to them all without error.
  708. No letters (a funny story of an illiterate who pretends not to know he is illiterate.)
  709. No letters were written on the back of the coin.
  710. No limited express of the private railway companies can compete with trains on the Shinkansen line in traveling time, and these companies have competed with Shinkansen lines in the aspects of cheaper fares and fees, of better station locations and of offering more comfortable train rides.
  711. No living thing once born can avoid death.'
  712. No longer having the government post, the third head of the family, Toshimoto, went to Kyoto but, as a member of the losing side in the Jokyu War, was unable to find a lord to serve.
  713. No longer in existence
  714. No manuscript that is certain to have been written during the Heian period has been found, and the number of manuscripts copied from the manuscript during this time is very small.
  715. No matter chronic or acute, eating a raw egg after treatment for pancreatitis just because it contains lot of nutritions, you may suffer stomachache.
  716. No matter how far westernization might infiltrate Japanese way of dressing, the high temperatures and humidity in Japan would make the fundoshi loincloths more attractive and satisfactory than the briefs and trunks in their function and efficiency as underwear.
  717. No matter how hard I may ask you to return, I can't see you, and only feel autumn breeze blowing cold and wild geese coming back.
  718. No matter how hard I may ask you to return, I only see autumn breeze blowing and wild geese coming back.
  719. No matter how he was depicted in stories, he was consistently described as a strict person remarkable for both wisdom and courage; Munenori's image as an outstanding figure is commonly observed.
  720. No matter how much I boast about the family name, for those who have no idea, it's like swallowing up real peppercorns or being asleep on a ship at night (they don't know what is going on), so I will try one pill to show you how it works.
  721. No matter what evaluations are given to these conflicts, it is clear that the mechanism of Kokuga (provincial government offices) headed by Zuryo helped such a wealthy farmer class grow to control the region and collect taxes more efficiently and gave them opportunities of acquiring huge vested interests.
  722. No matter whether being titled or not, any daimyo being allowed to hold a yakata-go title was authorized to bear shirokasabukuro (a white umbrella cover), mosenkuraoi (a tufted saddle cover), nurikoshi (a lacquard litter) and saihai (a baton of command) by the Muromachi bakufu.
  723. No matter whether it is a wooden statue, a picture or myogo, as a hoben (expediency) for the power of Amida Nyorai, which has no color or shape, Honzon is enshrined and being prayed in appreciation of Amida Nyorai's virtue.
  724. No matter whether it is chilled, warmed or warmed then cooled down, Japanese sake tastes good.
  725. No matter who the other people were, lacquered and painted headgear was worn and armor worn over court robes and a long sword carried.
  726. No member of the Mito-Tokugawa family had since become shogun.
  727. No mention whatsoever is made either in Kojiki or Nihonshoki of this kami's subsequent deeds, and this kami is said to be 'Chukushin' (literally, a god without form).
  728. No mizuhiki is used.
  729. No moat has been found.
  730. No more information from Kuge (court nobles) or from Rokuhara Tandai in Kyoto was available.
  731. No new city was formed in Kyoto Prefecture until Kyotango City was formed in 2004.
  732. No new licenses have been issued since 1945.
  733. No new streets were built in the area due to the zoning between Aneyakoji-dori Street and Takatsuji-dori Street, because it had been already urbanized.
  734. No normal person can compare.
  735. No officer shall serve concurrently in the legislature and the executive.
  736. No official interpretation has been forthcoming from the city government of Masan that adequately resolves this discrepancy between the historical facts and the grounds for their claims that Tsushima is part of Korea.
  737. No official regulations (in general approx. 73 to 75%)
  738. No one but Inoue could determine and execute reduction of interest payments and borrowing beyond the value of the collateral, and he assigned Konoike-ginko Bank as the only bank of account.
  739. No one can beat Ryoma who is greatly talented in flexibility.'
  740. No one could achieve anything if an instructor did not have his pupils observe and listen to it, show them how to do it, let them do it by themselves and praise them.'
  741. No one had been appointed as either a regent or a chancellor for a long time after Mototsune's death, but considering the Emperor's youth, Tadahira was appointed as a regent when Emperor Suzaku (the son of his sister, FUJIWARA no Onshi) succeeded to the throne in 930.
  742. No one is allowed to leave the library without returning the materials.
  743. No one knew where he was headed for.
  744. No one knows about the fourth vessel.
  745. No one knows what happened to UMETANI after that.
  746. No one of those yaguras that were built before the Battle of Sekigahara exists to the present.
  747. No one opposed Shinzei's decision, because he was knowledgeable enough about law to write "Hosso-ruirin" (a collection of legal documents).
  748. No one showed signs of Hikaru Genji after his death.
  749. No one succeeded to him.
  750. No one thinks that such descriptions were added in order to praise Yoshiie after the Kamakura period.
  751. No one was prosecuted.
  752. No one witnessed demonstrators using any weapons.
  753. No one would see how magnanimous he is."
  754. No one, but an ass who sets foot in this district Gochome, does not know my name. Hear it well.'
  755. No original manuscript of "The Tale of Genji" written by Murasaki Shikibu can be found to exist.
  756. No other achievements of his are known.
  757. No other buildings of the mansion of Imperial Prince Niitabe have remained.
  758. No other gate except the south gate has been found.
  759. No other historical materials about ARATAO no Akamaro are left.
  760. No other record showing that mudra was made and mantra was chanted in Daijoe, which was a ceremony of Shintoism has been found, and, therefore, it is an interesting record that shows that sokuikanjo had a relationship not only with the enthronement ceremony for the emperor, but also Daijoe.
  761. No other roles performed by Kobito are found in "The Nihonshoki."
  762. No parallel lines to the South Manchuria Railway should be built.
  763. No parking facilities available in the vicinity.
  764. No parking lots in the vicinity
  765. No particular achievements by Lord Tadaharu HORIO are known.
  766. No particular differences exists in their repertoire since both schools mutually use their repertoire.
  767. No party affiliation: 1 member
  768. No personal collection by him has survived today.
  769. No personal collection by him survives today.
  770. No personal poetry collection of his has survived down to the present day, but twenty-six of his poems were selected for inclusion in various imperial poetry anthologies, including nine in the 'Kokinshu' alone.
  771. No photograph is supposed to be installed in butsudan because it is nothing more than an instrument to remember the dead.
  772. No picture has been taken.
  773. No poems created by Mitsuie are found in any imperial anthologies of poetry in Japanese, but only the private collection of Mitsuie's poems, called "Joshobo-shu," has been handed down to the present day.
  774. No preface was provided, but the anthology includes poems by samurai.
  775. No prefectures established
  776. No private homes have as yet been designated national treasures.
  777. No prominent act to establish an original theory by Ninkan is seen before he was banished.
  778. No props are used in manzai, in principle; even when used, the number of the props is quite small.
  779. No railway is in service within the area and only regular bus services are available.
  780. No ray of light comes through the heartless opening in my bedroom (Love 2-765, 'Senzai Wakashu' (The Collection of a Thousand Years)).
  781. No reason is mentioned in Nihonshoki (Chronicles of Japan), but it is possible that the Prince Otsu's followers hid the Prince Otsu's identify because he was a minor, and a follower falsely called himself as Yamabe no Okimi since they could not identify friend or foe.
  782. No reason mentioned in "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan), but it is possible that the Prince Otsu's followers hid the Prince Otsu's identity, and someone pretended to be Yamabe no Okimi, since entering the areas they could not identify friend or foe.
  783. No rebel guarded the place.
  784. No record has been found for his other acts.
  785. No record has been found in which he proclaimed himself as Ujikuni HOJO.
  786. No record has been found that the standard was set to exchange old coins (fuhonsen) after Wado-kaichin was issued.
  787. No record have been found about ENOI no Okimi's role in the later domestic warfare.
  788. No record is available about sake-manufacturing/selling business operators.
  789. No record on the port they left has been found yet, but it was supposedly the port of Enshu (present the Pochette port in the territory of Russia.)
  790. No record was found about AU no Shima's acts afterwards.
  791. No record was found about KIFUMI no Otomo's acts afterwards.
  792. No records about INUKAI no Ikimi are found during the reigns of Empress Saimei and Emperor Tenchi until his name 'INUKAI no Muraji Ikimi' appears as the commander of Prince Otomo in 672, in the Jinshin War.
  793. No records other than this remain about this second leader, but the bloodline of Motomasa seems to have died out after his generation.
  794. No records survive of how Oi was dealt with, but it seems that he was dismissed from his post as Noto no kami (the governor of Noto Province) and either stripped of his court rank or demoted.
  795. No records were found about Mino no Okimi's acts in the domestic warfare afterwards.
  796. No records were found as to the subsequent repairs until 1926 but, considering that the interior walls have been repainted approximately three times; it seems that additional repairs have been performed to address damages as required since 1825.
  797. No records were kept of Tokotari's later acts.
  798. No records were kept of his other acts.
  799. No reference was made regarding the mother of Nobutada ODA in contemporary literature.
  800. No refund is available.
  801. No reliable historical materials were created until the sixth century.
  802. No relics remain.
  803. No religion
  804. No remains that suggest the past existence of a temple founded by the emperor have been found in the neighborhood.
  805. No reports were made on the matter, until many years later in 749, when the Mutsu province made the first gold offering, causing quite a stir.
  806. No researchers supported the Prince Otomo enthronement theory.
  807. No route bus service is available at Keihan Fujinomori Station.
  808. No route bus service is available at Keihan Fukakusa Station.
  809. No route bus service is available at Keihan Sumizome Station.
  810. No rule exists concerning the materials of beads either.
  811. No sake drinks are served while taking main dishes.
  812. No sect has such doctrine as to decorate butsudan with photograph.
  813. No shite (leading part): Woman in the village (the soul of Murasaki Shikibu)
  814. No shite: The soul of Murasaki Shikibu
  815. No shogun was appointed in the three years after Yoshiteru's assassination and, as such, the Muromachi Shogunate temporarily disappeared.
  816. No shopping is available on the platform, but a waiting room and an automatic vending machine are provided.
  817. No shuttle train has operated since the double-track section was extended to Nikenchaya Station.
  818. No soldiers dared to embark but Yoshitune declaring as follows:
  819. No sooner was this masquerade held than the nationalists reviled it as 'a sign of the ruin of the country.'
  820. No source materials to indicate clothing has been found from the sites of the Yayoi period that was characterized by rice cultivation in paddy fields.
  821. No specific records exist even for the period before the enthronement of the Emperor Sujin whose deeds were abundantly recorded.
  822. No specific records exist.
  823. No specification for geyujo was stipulated in the basic laws of Taiho Code and Yoro Code.
  824. No stops are made at this station.
  825. No street stalls of soba (noodles made from buckwheat) used a trailer towed by bicycle till the Edo period, and street venders made a round carrying a pole with boxes at both ends equipped with andon (a paper-covered lamp stand) as lighting and a space for dishes and foodstuffs..
  826. No subsidiary tomb is found around there.
  827. No substance related to Crustaceans is included in processes used to manufacture the foodstuffs approved by Judaistic rabbis (kashrut).
  828. No such custom can be found in any other country in the world and the culture of dedicating mathematical puzzles is said to be unique to Japan.
  829. No such manuscripts moreover have been identified.
  830. No superior trains run from Masuda Station westward, and most trains are a single-car trains that run without conductors on board.
  831. No surrounding moats have been discovered near the grave mound.
  832. No theory has been established yet about the origin of fundoshi loincloths, although there are two conflicting ideas that they had come to Japan either from southern countries or through the Continent.
  833. No ticket boxes are set inside trains, since they're so-called 'city-type one-man-operated trains' that use ticket gates at stations; consequently, tickets/fares aren't collected inside the trains.
  834. No track number has been set as guidance for station users.
  835. No track number is displayed.
  836. No trains run through the entire line at present, and the operation is being carried out separately for three sections; namely the Nagoya - Kameyama section of JR Central, the Kameyama - Kamo section, a non-electrified section of JR West, and the Kamo - JR Namba section, an electrified section of JR West.
  837. No troop from Prince Otomo's side raided them after that.
  838. No tsuchikabe (an earthened wall, or a mud wall) was used and traditional style with little decoration was adopted.
  839. No tsukuridashi has been found in the oldest model of keyhole-shaped tumuli.
  840. No veranda is wrapped around it and it has doma (dirt floor).
  841. No verifiable evidence remains about Naganori said at that time.
  842. No voiced consonant marks or punctuation marks are used.
  843. No waki (supporting role): Agui no Hoin
  844. No waki (supporting role): Fusasaki's retainer
  845. No waki (supporting role): Human trafficker
  846. No waki (supporting role): Shokoku ikken (taking a look at all the lands) monk (actually Kagetsu's father)
  847. No waki (supporting role): TAIRA no Koreshige
  848. No waki: Fusasaki's retainer
  849. No waki: Fusasaki's two retainers
  850. No weapons or violence was used at the all six demonstrations.
  851. No whale meat has been imported since 1992, but it is discussed to import the meat from Norway and/or Iceland where whales have still been hunt.
  852. No yagura of this era exists to the present, except tenshu (main keep or tower of a castle).
  853. No' is the particle 'no,' and 'chi' is a suffix meaning divine spirit, as in Kagutsuchi, so 'Kukunochi' means 'god of stem,' 'god of trees.'
  854. No, I work for a drugstore at 1 Chome, Nihonbashi and I thought of advertising the store here.
  855. No, he is Tsuruzo NAKAMURA, who makes people laugh at stage as a role of a fool but is an honest and serious man at home," to which the emperor laughed, "he's a funny man."
  856. No, must be a pickpocket.'
  857. No, we are asking for order.'
  858. No-ihai
  859. No-ihai (temporary ihai) is created immediately after death and used for the temporary altar and the funeral.
  860. No-ihai is burnt after the chuin-dan is cleared (i.e., after uchi-ihai is created and the spirit of a deceased person is transmitted from noi-hai to hon-ihai).
  861. No-ihai is made of plain wood just like uchi-ihai.
  862. No-latch connection (the stations from which passengers can exit without going through the ticketing gate) (in addition to the above): Sakurai Station (Nara Prefecture) (previous), Kuwana Station, Tsu Station, Matsuzaka Station, Ise-shi Station
  863. No-lecture-day was more frequent in the past, so Ryukoku University was once directed to amend the curriculum lacking in school hours by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.
  864. No-wash rice, that does not have to be washed before cooking, is also sold commercially.
  865. No. 02: Limited Loop Line for Yotsuya-ike Pond and Center-mae
  866. No. 03: Limited Loop Line for Center-mae and Yotsuya-ike Pond
  867. No. 04: for Marumachi via Yotsuya-ike Pond and Kiyomizu-cho-nishi
  868. No. 08: Loop Line for Yotsuya-ike Pond, Kiyomizu-cho and Marumachi
  869. No. 09: for Momoyama (Momoyama Goryo-mae Station on the Kintetsu Kyoto Line) via Yotsuya-ike Pond, Shimizu-cho and Marumachi
  870. No. 1 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Senbon Dori, and Bukkyo Univ., bound for Nishigamo Shako
  871. No. 1 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Shimogamo Hondori, bound for Demachiyanagi Station
  872. No. 1 boarding station
  873. No. 1 pier
  874. No. 1 wall is Shaka Jodozu (Illustration of Pure Land of the Buddha), No. 6 wall Amida Jodozu (Illustration of the Pure Land of Amida), No. 9 wall Miroku Jodozu (Illustration of the Pure Land of Maitreya), and No. 10 wall Yakushi Jodozu (Illustration of the Pure Land of Bhaisajyaguru).
  875. No. 101 Route (Raku Bus: dedicated to sightseeing): Via Kitaoji Dori, Kinkakuji-michi, Nishioji Dori, and Kitano Tenmangu, bound for Kyoto Station.
  876. No. 102 Route (Raku Bus): Via Kitaoji Dori, Kinkakuji-michi, Nishioji Dori, and Kitano Tenmangu, and Imadegawa Dori, bound for Ginkakuji-michi or Kinrin Shako
  877. No. 107: Bound for Nagamodai 5-chome
  878. No. 109: Bound for JR Nara Station via Nara Dreamland-mae
  879. No. 10: Bound for Kamo-no-Ie via Gansenji
  880. No. 111: Bound for JR Nara Station via Joruriji-mae, Nara Dreamland-mae
  881. No. 12 Iwama-dera Temple (Shojo-ji Temple) ? No. 13 Ishiyama-dera Temple ? No. 14 Mii-dera Temple (Onjo-ji Temple)
  882. No. 120 and No. 122 were sold in May 1914 to Mikawa Railway (currently, the Meitetsu Mikawa Line of Nagoya Railroad Co., Ltd.), and they were used under the same number with those of Tetsudo-in.
  883. No. 12: Loop Line for Kamishima-nishi, Shimizu-cho-nishi and Marumachi
  884. No. 13 of the imperial edict in 1886.
  885. No. 130 and No. 140 were sold in 1913 to Miyazaki Prefectural Railway (currently, a part of the Nippo Main Line and the Tsuma line of Kyushu Railway Company), and they were used under the same number as those of Tetsudo-In.
  886. No. 130 was sold in 1919 to Boseki Railway and used under the same number as that of Tetsudo-In.
  887. No. 131 and No. 141 were transferred to the Engineering Bureau of the Interior Ministry in March 1912 and used for construction work of government-administered rivers, but the details are unknown.
  888. No. 1575
  889. No. 19 of New Saigoku 33 Kannon Pilgrimage Sites
  890. No. 2 boarding station
  891. No. 2 pier
  892. No. 204 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Kinkakuji-michi, Nishioji Dori, Nishinokyo Enmachi, and Marutamachi, headed for Shirakawa Dori; circulation
  893. No. 204 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Takano, Higashi Kuramaguchi Dori, Shirakawa Dori, Ginkakuji-michi, Marutamachi Dori, and headed for Nishinokyo Enmachi; circulation
  894. No. 205 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Kinkakuji-michi, Nishioji Dori, Nishioji Nanajo, Nanajo Dori, and Kyoto Station, bound for Kujo Shako
  895. No. 205 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Rakuhoku Koko, Kawaramachi Dori, and Kyoto Station, bound for Kujo Shako
  896. No. 206 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Senbon Kitaoji, Senbon Dori, Nanajo Dori, and Kyoto Station, headed for Higashiyama Dori; circulation
  897. No. 206 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Takano, Higashiyama Dori, Nanajo Dori, and Kyoto Station, headed for Omiya Dori; circulation
  898. No. 23: Seeing the moon, somehow I become extremely melancholic, and I even feel as if the autumn has come only for me, though I know it's not so. ('Kokin wakashu' Autumn I, 193)
  899. No. 25 : bound for JUSCO Kumiyama to Keihan Chushojima
  900. No. 26 : bound for Sakaemachi to Kumiyama Danchi
  901. No. 26C : bound for Sakaemachi to Kumiyama Chuo Park
  902. No. 27C : bound for Jonanso to Uji-shako Depot
  903. No. 28: In winter, being in a hamlet in the mountains makes me even more lonesome, now that the people who came to see me have stopped visiting and the grass in the fields has died off. ('Kokin wakashu' (Collection of Ancient and Modern Poems) Winter, 315)
  904. No. 3 boarding station
  905. No. 3 pier
  906. No. 310 : bound for Horiike, Ogura to Uji-bunka-center (Uji city culture center)
  907. No. 34 and No. 38, which were continuously used by the government-managed railway, were used in Western Japan as they were, but later (around 1890 ?) they were transferred to Eastern Japan.
  908. No. 34: Who shall I become friends with, when even the pines of Takasago are not my old friends anymore? ('Kokin wakashu' Miscellaneous I, 909)
  909. No. 35 : bound for Midorigahara, Ogura to Uji-shako Depot
  910. No. 35B : bound for Ogura, Uji to Kyoto Prefectural Todo Senior High School
  911. No. 36 - Hikaridai Inner Circle Loop Line (via Hikaridai 3-chome)
  912. No. 36: The short summer night is already over though I thought it was evening still--where in the clouds, I wonder, will the moon stay. ('Kokin wakashu' Summer, 166)
  913. No. 37 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, and Horikawa Dori, bound for Nishigamo Shako
  914. No. 37 Route: Via Shimei Dori, Kamo Kaido, Kawaramachi Dori, Shijo Kawaramachi, bound for Sanjo Keihan
  915. No. 38 - For Gakkentoshi-Seikadai (one trip only on weekdays)
  916. No. 38: I no longer care about my sorrow because I'm sunk into oblivion, but I hold only your life dear because of being afraid that you, who forgot me after such a solemn vow, might get your just deserts. ('Shui Wakashu' Love-4, 870)
  917. No. 39 - For Hikaridai 1-chome Minami (via Seikadai 1-chome, U-Town Keihanna) (one trip only on Saturdays, Sundays and national holidays)
  918. No. 39, "Asajifuno Ononoshinohara Shinoburedo Amaritenadoka Hitonokoishiki" (In the field of pseudsasa japonica in Ono where grasses grow, I suffer loneliness, but I miss my sweatheart.) ('Gosen wakashu' (Kinyo Collection of Japanese poems) Love - 578).
  919. No. 390, Volume 3 of Manyoshu (A poem by Princess Ki)
  920. No. 41 - For Gakken-Nara-Tomigaoka Station (via Vocational Museum, KEIHANNA PLAZA, Hikaridai 8-chome)
  921. No. 44: If I never saw her again, I would neither blame her nor lament my misery.
  922. No. 47 - For Gakken-Nara-Tomigaoka Station (via Vocational Museum, KEIHANNA PLAZA, Hikaridai 2-chome, Hikaridai-minami)
  923. No. 48 - For Gakken-Nara-Tomigaoka Station (via Vocational Museum, KEIHANNA PLAZA, NTT Keihanna, Hikaridai 2-chome) (one trip only on weekdays)
  924. No. 48: Just as waves striking against crags because of roaring winds are broken, only my heart shatters and I'm still thinking of you. ('Shika wakashu' (Waka Collection of Verbal Flowers), Love I, 210)
  925. No. 50: I thought little of my life until I met you; yet now that I have met you I long to live longer.
  926. No. 54A : bound for NHO (=National Hospital Organization) Minami-Kyoto Hospital of the Independent Administrative Institution
  927. No. 58A : bound for Miyanotani
  928. No. 6 : Jonanso, Taiyogaoka
  929. No. 600 Route: East Rose Town Looped Route Clockwise Bound
  930. No. 601 Route: East Rose Town Looped Route Clockwise Bound via Crane Kyoto
  931. No. 610 Route: East Rose Town Looped Route Counter-clockwise Bound
  932. No. 610 Route: East Rose Town Looped Route Counter-clockwise Bound via Crane Kyoto
  933. No. 61: Double cherry blossoms from the ancient city of Nara are splendidly blossoming today in the palace in Kyoto. ('Shikashu' (the Collection of Verbal Flowers), Spring 29).
  934. No. 61B route runs via a newly constructed road.
  935. No. 64: One early morning, as the mist over the River Uji was being dispelled, I saw wickerwork fish traps emerging on this and that bank.
  936. No. 65: Bound for Wazuka-cho Kosugi, bound for Kizu Station
  937. No. 66 - For Kizugawadai-Jutaku (via Seikadai 1-chome, Vocational Museum (two trips only on weekdays)
  938. No. 66 - For Kizugawadai-Jutaku (via Seikadai 1-chome, Vocational Museum) (two trips only on weekdays)
  939. No. 66 On a mountain slope,Solitary, unaccompanied,Stands a cherry tree.Except for you, lonely friend,To others I am unknown.("Kinyo wakashu" miscellaneous No. 556)
  940. No. 66: Bound for Wazuka-cho Kosugi
  941. No. 67: On a spring night, I laid my head on his arm, although it's just a one night dream, it's shame to hear, people whispering behind their fans (also No. 961 in the 'Miscellaneous' volume of 'The Senzai Wakashu' (The Collection of Japanese Poems of a Thousand Years).
  942. No. 69: The colored leaves in the Mt. Mimuro where a stormy wind blows were like brocade floating on the Tatsuta-gawa River.
  943. No. 70 When I feel lonely, I go outside of my hut, but everywhere I look is the same evening in autumn. ('Goshui Wakashu' the first volume of the Autumn, No. 333)
  944. No. 71, "Yusareba kadotanoinaba otozurete ashinomaroyani akikazezofuku" (In the evening, visiting rice plants in the rice field in front of the gate, an autumn wind blows into my house.) ('Kinyo wakashu' (Kinyo Collection of Japanese poems) Autumn, 183).
  945. No. 72: It would be better not to take seriously the words of someone notorious for being flirtatious, or something that I might weep bitterly will happen. ('Kinyo wakashu', Love II, 501)
  946. No. 73 - For Miyamaki Station (one trip only on weekdays)
  947. No. 74 - For Kizu Station (Kyoto Prefecture) (one trip only on Sundays and national holidays)
  948. No. 79: The autumn wind was blowing. How bright was moonlight shining between the trailing clouds!
  949. No. 82: Unrequited love would have killed me, only the anguish was so overwhelming that I could not contain my tears by Doin the Priest.
  950. No. 84: If I live longer, shall I recollect the present distress as I yearn for the past anguish now?
  951. No. 85: Dawn is long coming as I spend these nights thinking of you.
  952. No. 88: Will I have to sacrifice myself for the night I spent with you away from home at Naniwa Bay, and to keep loving you for the rest of my life? ("Senzai Wakashu", Love-3, 806)
  953. No. 90: I wish I could show you how my sleeves are tainted by my tears of blood, whilst the fishermen's sleeves in Ojima remain untainted even though they are utterly drenched in water.
  954. No. M1 Route: Via Kitaoji Dori, Kinkakuji-michi, and Ritsumeikan Univ., bound for Haradani
  955. No. eighty-seven: The passing showers left the raindrops on the cedar-tree needles which are not dried yet, and the mists rise up to the autumn skies. ("Shin Kokin Wakashu")
  956. No.1 to 5 are the requirements for chief priest, and in addition, Horyu Sojo (inheritance of the system of teachings) is required.
  957. No.1 was remodeled to DLC1 in 1952.
  958. No.2 was scrapped in 1956, but its lower part was not reused since the problem became apparent concerning the rod of DLC1.
  959. No.3
  960. No.5 type was used.
  961. No.94:"From Mount YoshinoBlows a chill, autumnal wind,In the deepening night.Cold the ancient hamlet is;--Sounds of beating cloth I hear." ("Shinkokin Wakashu" autum 483)
  962. No1 and No.2
  963. Noami
  964. Noami (1397 - 1471) is a painter, master of ceremonial tea, and a renga (linked poem) poet who lived during the Muromachi period.
  965. Noami (karamono (things from China), tea ceremony, ink painting, renga (linked verse), flower arrangement)
  966. Noami also wrote "Kumidaikansochoki' (book of secrets about zashiki-kazari or decorations of a room or study with shoin - one of Japan's most important residential architectural styles, established during the Momoyama era).
  967. Noami is the author of "Kundaikansochoki" (book of secrets about zashiki-kazari - decoration of room or study with shoin).
  968. Noami was especially excellent at Suiboku-ga (ink painting) and is considered the founder of the Ami-ha group of painters; and it is said that Noami's painting of cranes was highly praised by Yoshimasa.
  969. Nobel Prize
  970. Nobel Prize and Fields Prize
  971. Nobel Prize natural science fields (Asian winners)
  972. Nobeoka relay stations for various broadcasting companies that cover the central part of the city are located here.
  973. Nobeoka-tai troop (Kageyasu OSHIMA)
  974. Nobeoka: Nobeoka-jo Castle
  975. Nobi who was divided into Kannuhi and Shinuhi, received restrictions on freedoms to choose where to live, to marry and to choose an occupation, and was tradable at a market legally.
  976. Nobinin who was under control and captured was returned to original place or transferred to Kakae-Hinin's place.
  977. Noble family with the rank of marquess
  978. Noble's heads were wrapped in silk, and placed in a bucket facing the seam.
  979. Nobles
  980. Nobles and aristocracy presented princesses with gifts of these dolls for birthdays and seasonal festivals.
  981. Nobles exercised their ingenuity in selecting the colors of outer and lining fabrics; which resulted in 'irome,' giving elegant names to combinations of fabrics in which the color of lining fabrics could be faintly seen through thin outer silk.
  982. Nobles gathered one after another around Goshirakawa, and Motomichi, a Sessho (regent) who was the leader of the pro-Taira group and Yorimori, a member of the Taira clan, remained in Kyoto.
  983. Nobles who held excellent practical business capabilities, such as FUJIWARA no Nagakata, Tsunefusa YOSHIDA, TAIRA no Tokitada, MINAMOTO no Michichika, and Kanemitsu HINO were selected to help the not-so-savvy Takakura.
  984. Nobles who were sent to attend mausoleum rituals were known as "nosaki no tsukai" (messengers sent to pay tributes).
  985. Nobles, powerful temples and shrines attempted to stabilize the management of the shoen by appointing a resident of an emerging wealthy class as a sho cho (administrator of a manor) and maintaining a labor force by accepting impoverished people who had run off due debts or escaped from their distributed assignments.
  986. Nobody can compare with him among kyoryosho (scholarship students), tokugyosho (selected students), shinshi (Daigaku student who passed a subject of the official appointment test), shusai (Daigaku student who passed a subject of the official appointment test), jogo (a student who completed a course), and taigyo (one who passed the test to become an official).
  987. Nobody had paid attention to the work for a hundred years after it was written, but a monk called Shotetsu found it in the mid-Muromachi period.
  988. Nobody in the world knows this."
  989. Nobody other than Yuina can look the inside of the mausoleum, and Yuina does not say anything about what he saw there.
  990. Nobori NAKAJIMA
  991. Nobori NAKAJIMA (February 25, 1838 - April 2, 1887) was a lowly member of the Shinsengumi (a special force that guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  992. Nobori NAKAJIMA (a Shinsengumi member) wrote that 'he was missing' and Jingoro YOKOKURA (same) recorded that 'he stayed in Aizu Wakamatsu-jo Castle.'
  993. Nobori Oji-enchi Park
  994. Nobori Yamagasa
  995. Nobori-ishigaki
  996. Nobori-ishigaki in Japan
  997. Nobori-ishigaki was a method of building stone walls adopted to fortify the defense of Japanese castles that were constructed on the Korean peninsula during Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI's Bunroku-Keicho War.
  998. Nobori-oji
  999. Nobori-oji is a city street in Nara City, Nara prefecture.
  1000. Noborigama (Climbing kiln)


256001 ~ 257000

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