; 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

321 / 438ページ
データ総見出し数 437939


  1. Tang names are Kingo taishogun (senior shogun Kingo),
  2. Tang relocated Ungjin Command Area and Andong Military Arm in the Liaodong district, and Tang's influence was eliminated from the Korean Peninsula after all.
  3. Tangible Cultural Properties
  4. Tangible Cultural Properties Designated by Kyoto City
  5. Tangible Cultural Properties are as follows.
  6. Tangible Cultural Properties designated by Nara Prefecture
  7. Tangible Cultural Property Designated by Kyoto Prefecture
  8. Tangible cultural properties
  9. Tangible cultural properties designated by Shiga Prefecture
  10. Tangible cultural properties other than architecture are in a difficult situation to survive because of abrupt changes in lifestyle, etc.
  11. Tangible folk cultural assets
  12. Tangible folk-cultural properties
  13. Tango
  14. Tango (May 5 of lunar calendar), Tango no Sekku (Boy's day)
  15. Tango (a term which means May 5 by the lunar calendar)
  16. Tango (the Boys' Festival)
  17. Tango - Kyoto line
  18. Tango Ajiwai-no-sato (Eating places in Tango): A michi-no-eki (a roadside rest area)
  19. Tango Chirimen (silk crepe)
  20. Tango Chirimen is a high-quality silk fabric produced in the Tango region of Kyoto Prefecture.
  21. Tango Daibutsu
  22. Tango Daibutsu (Great Buddha) is a large statue of Buddha in Honzaka, Ine-cho, Yosa-gun, Kyoto Prefecture.
  23. Tango Discovery No. 1 is operated as a rapid train from Kumihama Station to Toyooka Station, and Tango Discovery No. 2 operates as a rapid train from Toyooka Station to Kumihama Station.
  24. Tango Discovery No. 3 is operated only between Kyoto Station and Fukuchiyama Station/Higashi-Maizuru Station; it doesn't run on the lines of Kitakinki Tango Railway.
  25. Tango Discovery No. 63: The Limited Express 'Hashidate (train)' at Amanohashidate Station
  26. Tango Discovery No. 64: * no connection with a limited express train
  27. Tango Discovery No. 67: The Limited Express 'Hashidate No. 7' at Amanohashidate Station
  28. Tango Discovery No. 72: The Limited Express 'Monju (train)' at Amanohashidate Station
  29. Tango Discovery,' which was rolling stock owned by KTR, replaced 'Edel-Tango' as the limited express running through to the KTR Miyafuku Line and connected with the rolling stock of a round-trip 'Kitakinki' service.
  30. Tango Explorer
  31. Tango Explorer is the nickname for Kitakinki Tango Railway KTR Type 001 diesel multiple unit and also the nickname for the limited express trains that Kitakinki Tango Railway and West Japan Railway Company run using diesel railcars.
  32. Tango Futamata-gami [Fukuchiyama City]
  33. Tango House
  34. Tango Kairiku Kotsu
  35. Tango Kairiku Kotsu (Tango Bus) (head office: Yosanocho, Yoza-gun, Kyoto Prefecture)/Rapid Bus
  36. Tango Kairiku Kotsu Co., Ltd.
  37. Tango Kairiku Kotsu Co., Ltd. (Tankai Bus, the central ofice: Yosano-cho, Kyoto Prefecture) was in charge of the entire city.
  38. Tango Kairiku Kotsu Co.,Ltd. is a company which runs route bus, boat and ship, cable car, and lift businesses in and around the Tango Peninsula including Miyazu City, Kyotango City, or Yosa District, Kyoto Prefecture.
  39. Tango Kairiku Koutsu Co., Ltd.
  40. Tango Kami-no-onsen (a hot spring of the gods in Tango)
  41. Tango Matsushima
  42. Tango Peninsula
  43. Tango Province
  44. Tango Province and Amata County were incorporated into Kyoto Prefecture.
  45. Tango Province was originally a province where the Isshiki clan controlled as Shugo; military governor, but in 1579 Yusai HOSOKAWA together with Mitsuhide AKECHI defeated a member group of the anti-Nobunaga alliance including the Isshiki clan to conquer Tango and Tanba Provinces.
  46. Tango Province, located in Sanin-do, was one of the provinces administered by the Ryo-sei (administrative codes).
  47. Tango Province.
  48. Tango Province: Domains of Tango-tanabe, Miyazu, and Mineyama
  49. Tango Sushi
  50. Tango Tanabe domain
  51. Tango Textile Industry Association (Tango chirimen (silk crepe))
  52. Tango Toji
  53. Tango Tori-gai cockle
  54. Tango Washi paper
  55. Tango Washi paper is designated as an intangible cultural heritage of Kyoto Prefecture, and is said that as many as 200 Washi paper manufacturers existed at the time.
  56. Tango Watch-kan (aquarium)
  57. Tango Yamada Station: The Japan National Railways Miyazu Line (when it was in operation)
  58. Tango Yura Beach
  59. Tango Yura Beach is located in Miyazu City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  60. Tango chirimen (silk crepe) is a key industry, and takes advantage of the abundant water resources.
  61. Tango chirimen (silk crepes)
  62. Tango dialect
  63. Tango dialect is a kind of Japanese dialect that is spoken mainly in an area encompassing Miyazu City, Kyoto Prefecture and Kyotango City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  64. Tango is one of the seasonal festivals held on the 5th day of the 5th month.
  65. Tango no Naishi (year of birth and death unknown) was a woman who lived from the end of the Heian period to the beginning of the Kamakura period.
  66. Tango no Sasazushi Sassa
  67. Tango no Sekku (Boys' Day on May 5)
  68. Tango no kuni Fudoki (the records of Tango Province)
  69. Tango no kuni Fudoki (the records of Tango Province) contains information that a sizable island was submerged by an earthquake in 701, and as a result, only the top remained, forming Kanmuri-jima island and Kutsu-jima Island.
  70. Tango no sechi-e (an Imperial Court Ceremony, held on the fifth of May)
  71. Tango no tsubone later left the Imperial Court and resided at the Jodo-ji Temple in the estate of her diseased husband, Narifusa.
  72. Tango okoku ron (the theory of the Tango Kingdom)
  73. Tango': It's named after Tango Province, the old provincial name of the area in which this train is operated.
  74. Tango-Amanohashidate-Oeyama Quasi-National Park
  75. Tango-Kanno Station
  76. Tango-Kanno Station - Tango-Yura Station - Kunda Station
  77. Tango-Kanno Station, located in Urake Kumihama-cho, Kyotango City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Miyazu Line, which is operated by Kitakinki Tango Railway (KTR).
  78. Tango-Kanzaki Station
  79. Tango-Kanzaki Station, located in Yugo, Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Miyazu Line, which is operated by Kitakinki Tango Railway (KTR).
  80. Tango-Kingdom Romance-Bus
  81. Tango-Omiya Station
  82. Tango-Omiya Station - Mineyama Station - Amino Station
  83. Tango-Omiya Station, located in Kuchiono, Omiya-cho, Kyotango City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Miyazu Line, which is operated by the Kitakinki Tango Railway.
  84. Tango-Omiya Station, located in Kyotango City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a station on the Miyazu Line of Kitakinki Tango Railway Corporation (KTR).
  85. Tango-Tanabe Domain: Tanabe-jo Castle (Tango Province)
  86. Tango-Yura Beach
  87. Tango-Yura Station
  88. Tango-Yura Station, located in Yura, Miyazu City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Miyazu Line, which is operated by Kitakinki Tango Railway (KTR).
  89. Tango-cho
  90. Tango-cho, Takeno-gun, Kyoto Prefecture (the present Kyotango City) (affiliated as a friendship city)
  91. Tango-kitsu Station was its station name in the eras when the station was owned by Japanese National Railways (JNR) or West Japan Railway Company (JR West), but the present station name came to be used when its ownership was transferred to Kitakinki Tango Railway.
  92. Tango-sakyu (sand hill)
  93. Tango-tanabe Domain (Tango Province)
  94. Tango-yura beach
  95. Tangono kuni Fudoki Itsubun, a lost writing of regional gazetteer for Tango Province carries the following story as an engi (writing about the history) of Nagu-no-yashiro Shrine:
  96. Tangonokuni was then beset with turmoil as it faced constant attacks by the Hosokawa and Takeda clans, as well as Gekokujo (a coup).
  97. Tangoyamada Station renamed Nodagawa Station, Tangokitsu Station renamed Kitsuonsen Station.
  98. Tanhaku
  99. Tanhaku (also called shohaku) is a business custom which had been conducted in East Asia before the early modern times; with this custom, a bundle of copper coins consisting of a certain number of coins less than 100 is treated as equal value to 100 copper coins.
  100. Tanhaku was a custom fit for the economic situation at that time and hailed as a method to reduce the inconvenience of delivering copper coins.
  101. Tanhoku-tei: The tea house donated to the temple in 1928 by potter Zoroku MASHIMIZU.
  102. Tani Jinko refers to Jinko produced in Indochina, which is characterized by an aroma accentuated with bitterness.
  103. Tani Shukyo Dantai refer to religious organizations that are contained in the category of article 2, number 1 of the religious corporation act, such as shrines, temples, churches, and places for missionary work.
  104. Tanigawa (trains)': the trains operated in the southern section of Echigo-Yuzawa Station (or Gala Yuzawa Station in the ski season).
  105. Tanigawa trains mostly stop at every station.
  106. Taniguchi was later instrumental in establishing the Museum Meiji-mura Village.
  107. Taniha-gun or Tanba-gun District: the old name of Naka-gun (Kyoto Prefecture)
  108. Tanin FUKUI
  109. Tanin FUKUI (male 8 October, 1801- 22 August 1885) was a Japanese Tenkoku artist (artist of seal engraving) from the end of Edo period to Meiji period.
  110. Tanin-don
  111. Tanin-don is a kind of Donburimono.
  112. Tanin-don is basically made using the recipe same as Oyako-don.
  113. Tanin-don or tanin-donburi is a dish in which beef or pork that is boiled with onions in a stock mixed with soy sauce, mirin and sugar, stiffened with eggs, and then placed on donburi meshi (a bowl of boiled rice).
  114. Taninaka-no-Zenseian, founded by Tesshuu, is a famous temple of the Kokutai-ji sect.
  115. Taniwa no michinushi no Miko' (also written as [Tanihanohikotatasumichinoushinoo.]")
  116. Tanizaki immediately read through Rohan's manuscripts which Sanehiko YAMAMOTO, the director of Kaizo-sha Publishers, brought to him.
  117. Tanjo-ji Temple (Nara City)
  118. Tank Locomotives, Type 2-6-0 (1C) from Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works
  119. Tank Locomotives, Type 2-6-2 (1C1) from Baldwin Locomotive Works, U.S.A.
  120. Tanka
  121. Tanka (literally, short poems) is a type of waka poetry, and has a five-line poem with the 5-7-5-7-7 syllable structure.
  122. Tanka (thirty-one syllabled verse)
  123. Tanka (thirty-one syllables' poem)
  124. Tanka categorization
  125. Tanka circles in the beginning of the Meiji period were led by traditional men of culture from the aristocracy, with the Outadokoro school (the Palace School), especially the Keien school, at their center.
  126. Tanka circles soon became isolated and divided into the "insiders" (professional poets) and the "outsiders" (tanka appearing in newspapers and in seminars by amateurs).
  127. Tanka consist of five lines in the pattern 5-7-5-7-7.
  128. Tanka has a style that expresses the author's identity so strongly that it is often called the first-person poetry or the self poetry.
  129. Tanka poem
  130. Tanka poems concerning Tajima no himemiko
  131. Tanka poems until then bore some questions about universality or about life, even when the works appeared to be of a personal level.
  132. Tanka poetry (the modern tanka)
  133. Tanka poetry lost its direction and ideals, partly due to the fact that poets could not find new methods of expression.
  134. Tanka rules and techniques
  135. Tankai
  136. Tankai (1099 - 1174) was a shaso (priest who belonged to) Kumano-hongu-taisha Shrine and the 18th Kumano betto (title of an official who administered the shrines at Kumano) in the late Heian period.
  137. Tankai no Otodo was disappointed, and came to this land in disguise; he married an amaotome and had a son, and through many promises, he was able to retrieve the orb owing to the diver.
  138. Tankaiko told this ama that the reason why he came to this place was because he needed to find a treasure called "Menko huhai no tama" (a gem that is beautiful from any angle), given by Emperor Gaozong of the Tang Dynasty, which was lost on the way to Kofuku-ji Temple in Shido Bay during a storm.
  139. Tankaiko took Fusasaki back to the capital as his official son as he had promised her.'
  140. Tankei
  141. Tankei (1173-June 20, 1256) was a sculptor of Buddhist statues during the Kamakura period..
  142. Tankei was Kosho's elder brother.
  143. Tankei: The statue of Senju Kannon (Thousand Armed Goddess of Mercy) enshrined in Renge O-in (also known as Sanjusangen-do Hall) of Myoho-in Temple
  144. Tankeiken (Duanshi ink stone)
  145. Tankendo (way of short sword)
  146. Tanko (armor)
  147. Tanko Bushi (A Folk Tune of a Coal Mine): A folk song in Fukuoka Prefecture
  148. Tanko is one of the formal names of Ko (armor) used between Yayoi Period and Tumulus Period.
  149. Tanko made of 17 iron plates bound with leather: Omaruyama kofun-tumulus (Kofu City, Yamanashi Prefecture)
  150. Tanko made of horizontally long iron plates bound with leather: Kitsuneyama kofun-tumulus (Kaga City, Ishikawa Prefecture)
  151. Tanko made of iron triangular plates bound with leather: Nagatoronishi remains (Takasaki City, Gunma Prefecture)
  152. Tankosha Publishing - a corner of Horikawa
  153. Tankosha Publishing Co., Ltd. 2,100 yen (tax included) ISBN 4473032450
  154. Tankosha Publishing Co., Ltd., Shimei-dori, Kuramaguchi-dori Kado (corner of Shimei-dori Street ad Kuramaguchi-dori Street)
  155. Tankosha Publishing: a corner of Horikawa-dori Street
  156. Tanku (1176-1253), a disciple of Honen, resided at this mido during the Kamakura period before he passed it on to Jichi Kakuku.
  157. Tankuma - Kyo-ryori, local cuisine of Kyoto
  158. Tankyu
  159. Tanmai: temporary tax levied on each terrace of rice field.
  160. Tanmaishu (sake with a single variety of sakamai)
  161. Tanmono (roll of cloth)
  162. Tanmono is a general term for fabrics that are to become the materials for wafuku.
  163. Tanmono is a long, narrow piece of cloth ranging from 36cm to 72cm in width and a length ranging from 4m to 26m.
  164. Tanmono that are often used to make nagagi (full-length garments) for adult women are called "namihaba," which are 36cm in width.
  165. Tanmono, a roll of cloth, collectively indicates the textiles for kimono.
  166. Tannan Domain
  167. Tannan Domain of Kawachi Province issued a kome-ginsatsu with the price of rice in silver coins (e.g. 'two sho [unit of volume] of rice for one monme in silver coins') in 1821.
  168. Tannan ITO, with whom Sensai kept friendship disregarding age differences, wrote a book 'Rojin Danwa' which contains everyday dialogues of Sensai.
  169. Tannisho
  170. Tano Village, Nakahata Village, Izuriha Village and Sugio Village were merged into Kashida Village by the municipal merger in the Meiji period.
  171. Tanoguchi Domain (Shinano Province)
  172. Tanokami
  173. Tanokami (deity of rice fields and harvests) is a deity (Shinto religion) that Japanese agricultural people believe watches over a rich or poor harvest and brings about a bumper crop of rice.
  174. Tanokami becomes Rusu-gami (Caretaking-Gods) instead of coming and going.
  175. Tanokami comes and goes to and from houses and paddy fields.
  176. Tanokami descends on houses from mountains.
  177. Tanokami is then believed to leave the houses to their paddy fields on April 16 and revisit the houses on October 16.
  178. Tanokami leaves home to paddy fields.
  179. Tanokami may be further identified as an earthly deity (Chijin) or Inari-shin (the god of harvest) but clearly differentiated from the fishing god and Fukutoku-shin (a god who brings fortune and luck).
  180. Tanokami moves place to place among Tehjiku, houses, and fields in a year.
  181. Tanokami returns home from paddy fields.
  182. Tanokami returns to the mountain from houses.
  183. Tanokansa
  184. Tanokuchi Domain (Shinano Province) Chihanji assigned on June 22 (old lunar calendar) in 1869 to Tatsuoka Domain
  185. Tanokuchi, Inokoishigoe, and Shonai Areas
  186. Tanomo SAIGO (A Karo officer in the Aizu domain. In Boshin Civil War, he was one of the main figures from the Aizu domain.)
  187. Tanomo SAITO (1670 - 1716), who was a hatamoto with 5000 koku and a student of Dokan SHIMIZU the third, is a key person for the Shimizu-ha branch in various regions around the country.
  188. Tanomonosuke OISHI was a roshin (old or key retainer) who was a guardian of Yoshio OISHI, who became Hitto karo (the head of chief retainers) young, and assisted Naganori Asano, who was a young lord of the domain, governing the politics of Ako Domain actually instead of the two.
  189. Tanomoshi (mutual credit associations)
  190. Tanosuke SAWAMURA (III)
  191. Tanosuke SAWAMURA III as Umewaka YOSHIDA.
  192. Tanosuke SAWAMURA VI
  193. Tanosuke SAWAMURA VI (August 4, 1932 -) is a kabuki actor.
  194. Tanosuke SAWAMURA played the role of the protagonist in 'Musumegonomi ukinano yokogushi) (commonly called 'Kirare Otomi').
  195. Tanotani - Tenman-jinja Shrine Front - Nishi-Matsuguci - Senzoku - Welfare Center Front - Miwa Apartment
  196. Tanotani Pass tollgate - (Yumemigaoka) - (L'Hotel de Hiei) - checkpoint in front of the hotel - (The crossing point to the top to the Mt. Hiei) - Enryaku-ji Temple east building
  197. Tanotani Pass tollgate - Enryaku-ji Temple Yokawa parking (round-trip)
  198. Tanotani Pass tollgate - Enryaku-ji Temple Yokawa parking - The top of Mt. Hiei/ Enryaku-ji Temple east building - Ogi tollgate
  199. Tanotani Pass tollgate - L'Hotel de Hiei (round-trip)
  200. Tanotani Pass tollgate - Ogi tollgate (one-way)
  201. Tanotani Pass tollgate - The top of Mt. Hiei/ Enryaku-ji Temple east building (round-trip)
  202. Tanpopo
  203. Tanra, a territory that was under the influence of Kudara, also sent an envoy to the Tang Dynasty, and it is speculated that Wakoku and Kudara was involved in this matter at some level.
  204. Tanrei (crispy and dry)
  205. Tanritsu
  206. Tanritsu Shukyo Dantai refers to Tani Shukyo Dantai (a unitary religious organization) that doesn't belong to any Hokatsu Shukyo Dantai (comprehensive religious organizations that take in religious schools, sects, and religious communities).
  207. Tansen
  208. Tansen was a form of tax in Japan's Middle Ages.
  209. Tansetsu (forge welding) and Wakashi-nobe (heating and elongating)
  210. Tanshishi Kondei Hannya Shingyo by Emperor Sakuramachi
  211. Tansoroka (filtering with charcoal) or kasseitanroka (filtering with active charcoal)
  212. Tansu (chest of drawers), Chadansu (cupboard or chest for tea implements), Funadansu (chest made for the protection of fragile stuffs in a turbulence of a wild sea), Nagamochi (large oblong chest for clothing, personal effects, etc.), and Kori (wicker trunk)
  213. Tansu (singular)(単数) - Mon which consists individually.
  214. Tansu no oku no ho' (literally, 'in the back of a drawer') becomes 'Tansu no ura no ho'
  215. Tantan Museum
  216. Tantansai is also credited with promoting the tea ceremony through tea offerings at shrines and temples everywhere in Japan as well as engaging in its dissemination activities abroad.
  217. Tantantan tantantan tan
  218. Tanto (Short Swords)
  219. Tanto (short swords) or other Katana also came to have a longer point like the Tachi.
  220. Tanto dagger: Inscribed 'Yoshimitsu'
  221. Tanto from this period, had no curve, or it is slightly curved inward, and there are Nakago (core) without a curve and one in Furisode (kimono sleeve) style.
  222. Tanuki Route: Shuzan - Shimoyuge - Keihoku Byoin mae (Keihoku Hospital) - Kamisasae
  223. Tanuki Udon
  224. Tanuki Udon varies from region to region.
  225. Tanuki soba
  226. Tanuki-oyaji' (literary, a raccoon dog old man: a cunning old man) was Ieyasu's nickname.
  227. Tanukidanisan Fudo-in Temple
  228. Tanukidanisan-fudoin Temple
  229. Tanuma Okitsugu Ryonai Enbo-zu (distant view of Okitsugu TANUMA's estate) at Sagara Castle in Makinohara City
  230. Tanuma had the post of senior councillor (roju) taken from him and was demoted to one of feudal lords in waiting in the Wild Goose Room of Edo Castle (karino ma zume).
  231. Tanuma let him study in Dejima, where Dutch merchants lived.
  232. Tanuma organized an expedition team to investigate Ezo (present Hokkaido) for the government.
  233. Tanuma period
  234. Tanuma reformed a conventional structure depending on agriculture, and put a Mercantilism policy into action.
  235. Tanuma seemed to like Gennai HIRAGA, a famous inventor, very much.
  236. Tanuma spent plenty of the government money on the development of Ezo, with scant results.
  237. Tanuma tried to appoint Toshiaki HONDA as a member of the Ezo research group, but he declined the offer.
  238. Tanuma tried to reconstruct finance of the Edo bakufu by reducing its conventional dependence on agriculture and implementing mercantilistic reforms.
  239. Tanwa Taxi
  240. Tanyu KANO
  241. Tanyu KANO (March 7, 1602 [January 14, 1602 by the old calendar] - November 4, 1674 [October 7, 1674 by the old calendar]) was a painter of the Kano School during the Edo Period.
  242. Tanyu KANO numbered among her nephews.
  243. Tanyu KANO: "Tanyu shukuzu" (reduced-size copies made by Tanyu) owned by Kyoto National Museum and others
  244. Tanyu emphasized sketches and the copying of ancient paintings; consequently, he left numerous sketch books and reproduction books.
  245. Tanyu exercised his painting talent from childhood; in 1612, he met Ieyasu TOKUNAGA in Sunpu at the age of 11 and obtained a residence in Edo Kajibashi Mongai in 1621, subsequent to which he worked based in Edo and energetically created screen paintings in castles and large temples.
  246. Tanyu had no male heir, so he adopted Masunobu, son of the sword smith, Ryujo GOTO.
  247. Tanzaku
  248. Tanzaku is also influenced by five colored-segakibata of Buddhism which is used at the Buddhist service for segaki (Hungry Ghosts).
  249. Tanzaku means paper cut into strips, or thin slices of wood.
  250. Tanzaku's five colors, which are mentioned in the lyrics of a song "Tanabata-sama," refer to green, red, yellow, white and black based on Gogyo-setsu (the theory of five elements).
  251. Tanzan ISHIBASHI wrote in his book "Taisho Jidai no Shinhyoka" (True Assessment of the Taisho Period) that it was "a new period of great noteworthiness in the history of development of democracy."
  252. Tanzan ISHIBASHI, who was a newspaper journalist back then (but later became the Prime Minister) commented on Yamagata's passing saying, 'Death can also be public service.'
  253. Tanzan-jinja Shrine
  254. Tanzan-jinja Shrine in Nara Prefecture has a wooden Jusanjunoto, but it is not in the Rokaku style, because its eaves of the second to the thirteenth roof are close leaving little space between them.
  255. Tanzan-jinja Shrine in Nara Prefecture has a wooden Jusanjunoto, but it is not in the Rokaku style, because its eaves of the second to the thirteenth roof are close together leaving little space between them.
  256. Tanzan-jinja Shrine is a shrine located in Mt. Tonomine, Sakurai City, Nara Prefecture.
  257. Tanzan-jinja Shrine, which is the successor of Myoraku-ji Temple, is located in the mountains to the far south of this temple.
  258. Tanzan-jinja Shrine; it often clashed with Kofuku-ji Temple.
  259. Tanzen
  260. Tanzen is a thickly padded winter garment of Japanese style.
  261. Tao Yuan-Ming (365 - 427) was popular in the period of the Southern and Northern dynasties when culture, such as the tea ceremony, developed.
  262. Tao is truth, and is called Mugoku (infinite), or Taiji (the root of all things) or Taiso.
  263. Tao means "being natural" or "being inactive," and uses the principles of Yin and Yang (cosmic positive and negative dual forces).
  264. Tao-cho: "Anraku-shu" (treatises on peace and joy)
  265. Tao-cho: The second volume of "Anrakushu" (A Collection of Passages Concerning Birth in the Pure Land)
  266. Taoism
  267. Taoists perform Shokon no matsuri on the dead as well as the living.
  268. Tap tap, Dojo-ji Temple
  269. Tar included in smoke from burning wood penetrates into building materials of beams, thatched roof, or straw roof, enhancing bug-proof property or waterproofing property.
  270. Tara is derived from Tala (rhythm) of Sanskrit.
  271. Tara no Miko
  272. Tara-sho: estate of To-ji Temple.
  273. Tarachine' means 'haha' (mother).
  274. Tarai Ochi
  275. Tarai Udon
  276. Tarai Udon is a local dish of the Donari area, northeast of Tokushima Prefecture.
  277. Tarako
  278. Tarako (salted cod roe)
  279. Tarako and mentaiko
  280. Tarako consists mainly of about 65 % of water, 28.5 % of protein and 1.7 % of fats.
  281. Tarako in commercials
  282. Tarako is also used as an ingredient in rice balls and as a topping on "chazuke" (boiled rice with tea poured over it [a bowl of rice and tea]) or dressed with squid meat for an appetizer to go with sake.
  283. Tarako is eaten raw or heated to be eaten as "yaki-tarako" (grilled tarako).
  284. Tarako is featured in a mascot character named 'Tarako Kewpie' used in commercials for a product of Kewpie Corporation, and also used as a motif in 'Tarako Dai-sakusen' (The Blitz of Salted Cod Roe), a character of Crux (stationery company).
  285. Tarako is rich in Vitamin A and Vitamin B3 (niacin).
  286. Tarako is salty.
  287. Tarako is sometimes used for a derogatory term for the color (vermillion No. 5) of coating of diesel trains which former Japanese National Railway used in its late period.
  288. Tarako produced in Kojohama has become a brand product called 'kojohama-no-tarako' (salted cod roe made in Kojohama), which has been sold in television home shopping programs.
  289. Tarako refers to the ovary (roe) of cod.
  290. Tarako spaghetti originated as spaghetti mixed with caviare instead of being mixed with bottarga.
  291. Tarama's Honen-sai Festival for a good harvest (May 4, 1976; Tarama-son, Miyako-gun; Tarama-son Minzoku Geino Hozonkai [Association for the Preservation of Folk Performing Arts in Tarama Village])
  292. Tarannai - Taihojoryu route
  293. Tarano is located in northern Iga and the access route as mentioned above can be blocked if this place is occupied.
  294. Tarashinakatsuhiko no Sumeramikoto, the Emperor Chuai
  295. Tarashinakatsuhiko no mikoto (Emperor Chuai)
  296. Tarashinakatsuhiko no sumera mikoto settled in Anato (Chofu, Shimonoseki City) and in the palace of Kashii at Tsukushi, and governed the country (Kashii, Fukuoka City).
  297. Tarayo-ki - Shinkaku Collection, 3 books
  298. Tare
  299. Tare Katsudon (bowl of rice topped with cutlet with soy sauce)
  300. Tare katsudon is also called Shoyudare katsudon (bowl of rice topped with cutlet with soy sauce).
  301. Tare sauce for unadon or unagi-donburi is mainly made from soy sauce and sugar, but its ingenious recipe is traditionally and secretly reserved in each shop.
  302. Taremiso has two categories, namatare (the raw taremiso) and ninuki which is made by boiling down both namatare and shaved pieces of dried bonito together.
  303. Taremiso was made as follows: miso is boiled down with water, and then put into a sack made of cloth and hung down.
  304. Taremiso was made by adding water to soybean paste, boiling it down, and straining it through a cloth bag.
  305. Taretsutsumi dango' sold at the Awashima-Do and 'mitarashi hanako' of the Masuya head store (it went into voluntary liquidation on December 7, 2007) are two examples.
  306. Target
  307. Target Resources in Japan's Advance into the South
  308. Target Shooting
  309. Target and Yumiya
  310. Target countries and areas for promoting visits to Japan
  311. Target for bow and arrow
  312. Target for military art
  313. Target practice
  314. Target practice using a gun is called shooting, which is a relative term used in archery.
  315. Target shooting with hinawaju
  316. Targeting only the children of nobles or gunji, education at that time was only for a limited number people.
  317. Targets are placed at three locations.
  318. Targets of the oppression included Yukio OZAKI, Kenkichi KATAOKA, Chomin NAKAE and Toru HOSHI
  319. Tariff autonomy, which was prescribed in the affiliated provision and trading rules concluded several months later, was also approved smoothly.
  320. Tariki Hongwan
  321. Tarikihongan (salvation by faith in Amitabha) has the following meanings:
  322. Tarikimon Tetsugaku Gaikotsu
  323. Tarikubi: Wearing a garment with Horyo by overlapping Uwamae on Shitamae
  324. Tarimaro's troop fell into disorder and was defeated, however Tarimaro himself had noticed that the enemy's soldiers had been using a word, and managed to run away saying 'kane' to the enemy.
  325. Tarishihiko
  326. Tarishihiko was a king of Wa (Japan) mentioned in the the article of East Barbarian in Wa, section 46 of the 81st volume in "Suishu" (the Book of the Sui Dynasty).
  327. Taro (the first son).
  328. Taro ANDO:the fourth secretary
  329. Taro KATSURA (Duke, Army General), Prime Minister
  330. Taro KATSURA strongly moved ahead with this from the point of view that 'a new territory is required to be a powerful country comparable to Europe.'
  331. Taro KATSURA, Minister of Finance (concurrent assumption of ministership)
  332. Taro KATSURA, a viscount (Choshu clique; Army man)
  333. Taro KATSURA, who led the Japanese government twice and won the strong trust of Emperor Meiji, sought to establish a new party 'Katsura Shinto' and reform the clique of bureaucrats connected with Yamagata.
  334. Taro Kaneshige HIGUCHI (Higuchinen-ryu school)
  335. Taro MATSUDAIRA : 120
  336. Taro NAKAMURA
  337. Taro NAKAMURA (1852 - May 14, 1878) was a servant of Toshimitsu OKUBO; the First Secretary of Interior.
  338. Taro NITTA, Soseki's brother's grandson, operating a public entertainment agency
  339. Taro Narikane KANZAKI (year of birth and death unknown) settled in Akune-in (Akune City) from the domain of Takae and took a daughter of 司執印氏図嘉房 at Nitta-jinja Shrine (Satsumasendai City) to wife, and changed his name from Kanzaki to 'Taro Narikane AKUNE.'
  340. Taro Narikane KANZAKI was Narimichi's son.
  341. Taro TEZUKA
  342. Taro arrived at Koyasu, and looked for his parents' grave, but it could not be found.
  343. Taro finally found the grave, and built a hermitage in order to live there.
  344. Taro nushi
  345. Taro then opened the casket, and the smoke which billowed out began to envelop him, turning him into an old man.
  346. Tarokaja and Jirokaja were asked to look after the house, but they couldn't get the tub out of their mind.
  347. Tarokaja asks the sake shop owner for sake.
  348. Tarokaja bustles with joy and buys the umbrella, paying large sum of money.
  349. Tarokaja comes out to the city and shouts, 'I would like to buy Suehiro!' on the main street.
  350. Tarokaja dances hayashi (hayashi-mono) taught by the swindler.
  351. Tarokaja decides to tell him 'a story of catching Charadriidae seen in Tsushima Matsuri (Tsushima Festival, a religious festival of Tsushima-jinja Shrine),' and starts shikatabanashi (talking with gestures).
  352. Tarokaja gets astride on a wooden stick and picks up a sake cask while turning around once, imitating a horseman of yabusame, and runs for his life.
  353. Tarokaja makes sake shop owner to beat time, and he watch for a chance and tries to snatch a sake cask while singing and dancing.
  354. Tarokaja says, 'it uses a good paper and frames, but there is no picture (絵: reads 'e').'
  355. Tarokaja tries to get his attention again by talking about yabusame (horseback archery), but the now cautious sake shop owner reminds Tarokaja not to use a sake cask in the story.
  356. Taromaru was renamed Taro Tameie OSHIMA (and later renamed again to Tamemasa) at his genpuku (coming of age ceremony).
  357. Taroshichi hears their conversation and tries to run to the police, then Sangoro notices him and kills him; Kazuemon sheds his disguise as Gengobe and leaves for the residence of the Kono family.
  358. Tarotakahide
  359. Tarozaemon
  360. Tartar sauce for chicken nanban and sauce used for nanbanzuke are in the seasoning sections at almost all supermarkets in Miyazaki Prefecture.
  361. Tartar sauce, Worcester sauce and ponzu sauce, together with special kinds of homemade ingredients if needed, are also used to taste.
  362. Taru (barrel)/yuidaru (barrel with hoops)/taga (hoop)
  363. Taru-kaisen (a kind of cargo vessels), Higaki-kaisen (a kind of cargo vessels)
  364. Taruho INAGAKI, a novelist who had kept contact with Yukio MISHIMA, is famous for his eccentricities on fundoshi loincloth.
  365. Tarui-juku Station on Nakasen-do Road, hatago 'Kamemaruya' (Tarui-cho, Fuwa-gun, Gifu Prefecture)
  366. Taruki (rafter): a piece of wood to lay between the ridge and eaves to support lath and backboards of the roof.
  367. Tarumi-jinja Shrine in Suita City, Osaka Prefecture and others
  368. Tarumiyama-kofun Tumulus (Katahiraotsuka-kofun Tumulus and the Takabatake Mausoleum of Imperial Prince Nakano)
  369. Tarutaru sauce (tartare sauce or tartar sauce in English) is a kind of sauce (seasoning) made from mayonnaise.
  370. Taruzake (literally, cask sake)
  371. Taryo OBAYASHI finds 'the second self' and Atsuhiko YOSHIDA points out a twin-like relation.
  372. Tasaburo KUMAGAI
  373. Tasaka brought out the lively acting style of Sachiko HIDARI in "Jochukko" (The Maid's Kid).
  374. Tasaka came to the fore with his major hit "Kokoro no Jitsugetsu" (Heart of Reality) starring Takako IRIE, and he came to make films according to his own plans.
  375. Tasaka skillfully awakened Yoshiko SAKUMA to acting in "Goban-cho Yugiri-ro" (Evening Mist Tower of the Fifth Town) and "Mizuumi no Koto" (The Strings Cleansed at the Lake), and similarly awakened Yoshiko MITA to acting in "Same" (The Shark) and "Hiyameshi to Osan to Chan" (Cold Rice, Osan, Chan) in which she co-starred with Kinnosuke NAKAMURA.
  376. Tasaka took this as an opportunity to join Nikkatsu Daishogun Studios in 1924 despite opposition from his strict father.
  377. Tasaka was a great master who stuck faithfully to his own path throughout his life.
  378. Tasaka was born in the Seto Inlands Sea fishing village of Nutahigashi Village in Toyota-gun, Hiroshima Prefecture (modern-day Nutahigahi-cho, Mihara City).
  379. Tasaka was drafted in 1945, the final year of the war, and while stationed in his hometown of Hiroshima with his unit, he was in the vicinity when the atomic bomb was dropped in August.
  380. Tashibu Manor eventually came under the control of Usa-jingu Shrine which possessed manors of more than 20,000 hectares in Kyushu, and was a valued as one of the manors known as 'Hongosho Juhakkasho' (lit. the 18 real manors).
  381. Tashibu no Sho (Tashibu Manor)
  382. Tashibu no Sho (Tashibu Manor) was a manor belonging to Usa-jingu Shrine in Kunisaki District, Buzen Province (modern day Bungotakada City, Oita Prefecture).
  383. Tashidaka no Sei (Tashidaka system, a wage system established by the Edo bakufu)
  384. Tashidaka no sei (Tashidaka system) refers to an act enforced by Yoshimune TOKUGAWA in July 1723.
  385. Tashiraka no Himemiko
  386. Tashiraka no Himemiko Fusumada burial mound
  387. Tashiraka no Himemiko Fusumada-ryo (The Mausoleum of Tashiraka no Himemiko)
  388. Tashiraka no Himemiko was a member of the Imperial family who lived during the Kofun period (tumulus period), and was the empress of Emperor Keitai.
  389. Tassels are put through a hollow ceramic, then those are put on both ends of the roller.
  390. Tassels hanging from the four corners of the roof are not merely tassels for decoration but they represent the cloths of the same color that once wrapped the omitted posts.
  391. Tassels have a distinctive feature because they are knotted in a unique manner, called 'rennyo-musubi' devised by Rennyo Shonin, so that they cannot be used for counting.
  392. Tassels have a distinctive feature since tassels attached to Oyadama are not symmetrical.
  393. Tassili n'Ajjer (Algeria)
  394. Taste
  395. Taste of mikan depends upon the contents of sugar and acid and their balance, and the thickness of carpel.
  396. Taste of soy-sauce
  397. Taste to savor with our own mouth is a clean mental state of Bosatsu.
  398. Tastes of fillings, such as processed sweet pork and fried bread, are also a little different from those in Japan.
  399. Tasuna KURATSUKURI is his child, and a sculptor, KURATSUKURI no Tori is his grandchild.
  400. Tatage-no-fumite Houkenhyo ? Attributed to Kobo-daishi
  401. Tataiko
  402. Tataki
  403. Tataki (a floor hard-packed with plaster), diatomite or concrete tiles are used for finishing a doma,
  404. Tataki (chopped fish into small pieces with a kitchen knife)
  405. Tataki by Broiling
  406. Tataki by Mincing
  407. Tataki in general
  408. Tataki is a cooking method used mainly for preparing fish.
  409. Tataki is an earthen floor which is made by mixing "tatakitsuchi" (beaten earth) with lime and water, then beating and solidifying it.
  410. Tataki-gobo (burdock roots that have been pounded and garnished with a sesame dressing)
  411. Tataki-gobo has been eaten to pray for a good harvest because its shape and color are similar to those of a black, auspicious bird that is said to come flying down when a good harvest is expected.
  412. Tataki: the sashimi in which the surface of raw fish or animal meat is grilled slightly, with the meat sliced for eating
  413. Tatakibashi
  414. Tatami mats (floor coverings made of tightly woven grass and straw) are set up behind the makiwara for fear an arrow might break a wall or window glass when it misses the makiwara.
  415. Tatami mats were originally a bed and in the aristocratic society during the Heian period strict usage showing the status of the person who was seated there was established as a person with higher status used larger, thicker and more tatami mats.
  416. Tatami mats were placed for Nyobos' (court ladies') seats on the south, west, and north sides of Tobari.
  417. Tatami mats, being made of plants called rushes, offer a sense of togetherness with nature and generate feelings of coolness in summer and warmth in winter, which are features of a Japanese-style room.
  418. Tatami, and Zabuton (traditional Japanese cushions used to sit on the floor)
  419. Tatami-iwashi (dried baby sardines flattened like paper)
  420. Tatami-iwashi is a processed food of baby sardines whose production process consists of cleaning and sifting, either before or after boiling, with a reed screen or fine mesh on a wooden frame, then drying them in the sun and forming them into a thin sheet (net-like).
  421. Tatara-buki method; the type of steel used to make a Japanese sword is called Japanese steel or Tamahagane.
  422. Tatari
  423. Tatari (a curse)
  424. Tatari by Vengeful Ghost
  425. Tatari refers to a condition wherein a god, Buddha, or a soul of human being causes a calamitous condition for human beings, or a supernatural force that works within that condition.
  426. Tatari-chi also has local names such as 'Otoroshi-tokoro,' 'Bachi-yama,' or 'Irazu-yama.'
  427. Tatari-chi is a particular mountain, woods, or fields that is feared to cause a tatari.
  428. Tatari-gami
  429. Tatari-gami are Shikon (four spirits) which are held in awe but avoided, and believed to become a powerful guardian god if treated cordially.
  430. Tatarigami wo utsushiyaru matsuri (ceremony of sending out tatarigami demon)
  431. Tatchu (minor temple in the site of main temple) of Nanzen-ji Temple
  432. Tatchu (sub-temples)
  433. Tatchu of Daitoku-ji Temple
  434. Tatchu of Konkai Komyo-ji Temple; it is also called "Yodomi no seki."
  435. Tatchu of Myoshin-ji Temple
  436. Tatchu of Sennyu-ji Temple
  437. Tatchu of Tofuku-ji Temple
  438. Tate Mitsuhiki-ryo: in 1189, when Oshu Fujiwara clan was subjugated, the crest was given to Tomomune DATE by MINAMOTO no Yoritomo.
  439. Tate-haiden (literally, a deep breadth rectangular prayer hall)
  440. Tate-haiden serves as a passageway to the honden, and the space toward the end of the long axis of the haiden serves as heiden, or offering hall.
  441. Tateana-shiki (vertical, pit-type) dwelling
  442. Tatebayashi City, Gunma Prefecture is now a wheat-producing area and the birthplace of the 'Head Office of Nisshin Seifun Group Inc. (original),' the predecessor of the 'Head Office of Nisshin Seifun Group Inc.'
  443. Tatebayashi Domain: Tatebayashi-jo Castle
  444. Tatebayashi Tokugawa family (referred as "Goryoden") (lapsed when 5th generation clan chief Tsunayoshi TOKUGAWA inherited the role of 5th generation Shogun.
  445. Tatebayashi Udon, is a hot-selling line of dried noodles, characterized by their varieties.
  446. Tatebue
  447. Tateeboshi (eboshi with a peak): The most formal among the eboshi.
  448. Tatehaya Susano no mikoto
  449. Tatehyogo (Early Edo Period; Worn by yujo)
  450. Tatehyogo: This hairstyle was popular in Kyoto and Osaka in the early Edo Period.
  451. Tateishi-kaido Road and Otogoe: Route via Heguri-cho, Yao City.
  452. Tateishi-kaido Road, Otogoe and Hattorigawa-mura Village (Kawachi Province) - Kyuanji-mura Village
  453. Tateishi-kaido Road, Otogoe and Okubo-mura Village (Kawachi Province) - Daido-mura Village
  454. Tateita cook:
  455. Tateiwa-jinja Shrine has 'Jinmu-tenno Onkoshikakeiwa' (a rock on which Emperor Jinmu took a seat).
  456. Tatekawa School of Storytellers
  457. Tateki TANI
  458. Tateki TANI (March 18, 1837 - May 13, 1911) was a feudal retainer of the Tosa clan, a military man and a statesman who lived from the end of Edo period to the Meiji period.
  459. Tatekura-go (多天久良)
  460. Tatemon-matsuri Festival (December 15, 1997; Uozu City; Uozu Tatemon Hozonkai [Uozu Tatemon Preservation Association])
  461. Tatenashi (no shield) (Kanda-tenjinja Shrine) ? handed down from the Takeda clan
  462. Tateno was influenced by such writers as Naoya SHIGA and Saneatsu MUSHANOKOJI, who advocated naturalist literature.
  463. Tatesashi (vertical insert): Kanzashi which is vertically inserted into bin (sideburns).
  464. Tatesashi: Kanzashi which is vertically inserted into binmado (upper part of bin or sideburns).
  465. Tatetsuki-kofun Tumulus
  466. Tatewaki AJIMA
  467. Tatewaki AJIMA (A Karo officer in the Mito domain. He was forced by Naosuke II to commit ritual suicide by disembowelment in Ansei no Taigoku [suppression of extremists by the Shogunate in the Ansei era (1854 - 1860)]. Later, his reputation was restored by an Imperial order.)
  468. Tatewaki KOMATSU, who was responsible for diplomacy, called for the consideration of protests by foreign ministers that the government was currently facing, and the conference adopted 'deportation of Christians.'
  469. Tatewaki TADA was a son of Kazue MURAYAMA (otherwise written as '可寿江'.
  470. Tatewaki's mother: Foster mother of Ukon no Shosho
  471. Tateyama Castle (Tateyama Town, Yonezawa City, Yamagata Prefecture)
  472. Tateyama Expressway, Ichihara Interchange - National Route 297 - National Route 128 - Moriya Beach Parking Area (there is a guidance sign)
  473. Tateyama-jo Castle (Awa)
  474. Tateyama-jo Castle (Kazusa)
  475. Tateyama-jo Castle,' where Motofuji HIKITA lived, is located in Kazusa Province and different from the former castle of the Anzai family, although the two castles are often confounded with each other in various books.
  476. Tatezenza does not have to labor basically, and he only has to give directions on work to other (lower) zenza.
  477. Tatezenza, in reality, has more power than a new shinuchi.
  478. Tatezuna is said to be the origin of purifying sand to be spread in the unlucky northeast corner.
  479. Tatezuna: The two cone-shaped sand mounds in front of the hosodono worship hall represent Mt. Ko-yama in which the deity resides.
  480. Tato
  481. Tato (田堵) is also written in Chinese characters as "田刀" or "田頭."
  482. Tato fumyo farmers were gradually placed under the rule of territorial governors in the role of local government officers called gunji, goji or hoji within government territories, and under the rule of manorial lords in manors as their retainers called geshi or kumon.
  483. Tato fumyo was not allowed to privately own the myo.
  484. Tato fumyo was only obliged to fulfill the duties of distribution of land tax and assignments.
  485. Tato fumyo was under the obligation to distribute taxes and assignments, such as kanmotsu (tribute goods paid as taxes or tithes) and zoyaku (odd-jobs tasks) to the kokuga in exchange for holding a commission from the kokuga to administrate each myo.
  486. Tato means the wealthy farmer class that managed rice fields belonging to shoen (manor) or kokugaryo (rice fields governed by provincial government office) during Japan's Heian period.
  487. Tato that became deeply involved in the management of Imperial demesne, obtaining the position of myoshu (owner of rice field), not only ran the management of cultivated land but also developed new rice fields by themselves, and became feudal lords or kaihatsu-ryoshu (local notables who developed the land).
  488. Tatogami (pieces of paper kept inside the bosom): Deep red torinokogami (smooth and glossy Japanese paper).
  489. Tatos developed rice fields centering on menden and went ahead with territorial land governance.
  490. Tatou and hiougi are put in a space on the chest and a shaku is held in a hand.
  491. Tatsu (Dragon)
  492. Tatsu no otoshigo
  493. Tatsuaki KURODA
  494. Tatsuaki KURODA (September 21, 1904 - June 4, 1982) was a Japanese lacquer artist and wood worker.
  495. Tatsuaki KURODA (wood craftsman)
  496. Tatsuaki TAMURA
  497. Tatsuchiyo served to Hidetsugu TOYOTOMI, then Ieyasu TOKUGAWA after kaieki (the punishment by removal of samurai status and expropriation of territories) of Hidetsugu.
  498. Tatsugoro TAKAGI of Takagi Shuzo cross-fertilized Miyama nishiki/Gyokuryu F10 and developed it over a period of 18 years.
  499. Tatsugoro TAKAGI of Takagi Shuzo cross-fertilized Yamasake No. 4/Miyama nishiki and developed it.
  500. Tatsugoro got angry with his words, saying, "Excuse me, Sir. Sumo wrestlers and firemen are all the same human being, aren't they? Don't degrade us."
  501. Tatsugoro had a grudge against Yotsuguruma Daihachi and ambushed him at Yatsuyamashita, a suburb of Shinagawa.
  502. Tatsugoro of the Me-gumi firefighter brigade ・・・Kikugoro ONOE the fifth.
  503. Tatsugoro was also blamed by Kame-emon, a sworn brother who happened to be there; Tatsugoro, who tried to control his temper, lost his patience, and spoke his mind at last, bringing out a letter of divorce he had already prepared.
  504. Tatsugoro's wife Onaka ・・・Gennosuke SAWAMURA the fourth.
  505. Tatsugoro, who happened to pass by, could not overlook the situation and tried to settle the quarrel; however, he backed off because the manager of the playhouse intervened to calm the quarrel.
  506. Tatsugoro, who prepared himself for the eventuality that the quarrel might be inevitable, went to Kisaburo's place in Sukiyagashi and hinted that he might part with him.
  507. Tatsuhime was eventually moved to Odate Village, Joshu Province (the present-day Ota City [formerly Ojima-cho], Gunma Prefecture), the outland that the Tsugaru family had been given as a reward for the Battle of Sekigahara, and Matehime was received as the lawful wife.
  508. Tatsuhisa SHIMAZU: Satsuma Province, Osumi Province and Hyuga Province (though participating in no real battle)
  509. Tatsuji
  510. Tatsuji (1846 - 1910) was a geisha of the Shimabara Kikyoya house in Kyoto.
  511. Tatsuji died in 1910 at the age of 65.
  512. Tatsuji was intimate with Genzui KUSAKA, and his son, Shujiro KUSAKA, was said to be a child between him and Tatsuji or another woman in Fushimi.
  513. Tatsuke family
  514. Tatsuki: a hatchet with a wide blade
  515. Tatsukichi MINOBE, a scholar of constitutional law, and Inazo NITOBE, a scholar of colonial policies, as well as social scientists such as Tadao YANAIHARA generally considered it as a colony, while Kiyoshi TABOBASHI, a historian, Ikki KITA, a thinker, and others did not.
  516. Tatsukichi MINOBE, an advocate of the emperor-as-organ theory, however, valued the second Kensei Yogo Undo highly, and commented 'you feel as though you were finally beginning to see a shaft of sunlight after the long rainy season.'
  517. Tatsuko KYOGOKU
  518. Tatsuko KYOGOKU (date of birth unknown - October 22, 1634) was a woman who lived during the Sengoku period (period of warring states) (Japan) and early Edo period.
  519. Tatsuko first married Motoaki TAKEDA, the Shugo (Military Governor) of Wakasa Province, and gave birth to two sons.
  520. Tatsuko was captured and was made Hideyoshi's concubine.
  521. Tatsumaru Incident
  522. Tatsumi Daimyojin (Tatsumi Shinto Shrine)
  523. Tatsumi Daimyojin (Tatsumi-jinja Shrine)
  524. Tatsumi Geisha (professional female entertainers)
  525. Tatsumi Geisha in Fukagawa (Koto Ward), Tokyo prided themselves for looking 'natty' showing their spirit by wearing geta made of paulownia on barefoot with no tabi (Japanese socks with split toe) and haori coat.
  526. Tatsumi Geisha originated from a popular Geisha in Nihonbashi (present-day Chuo Ward, Tokyo) named 'Kikuya,' who moved to Fukagawa because she had trouble in Nihonbashi.
  527. Tatsumi Geisha preferred light makeup, dressed in plain grayish color with bare feet without wearing tabi (split-toe socks) even in winter; they tossed on Haori which was for men at that time and entertained guests with mannish speaking.
  528. Tatsumi Geisha refers to professional female entertainers, who were particularly popular in Fukagawa in Edo (present-day Fukagawa, Tokyo) around the Edo period.
  529. Tatsumi Geisha, who were the example of the spirit of Edo, often appear in works describing Edo.
  530. Tatsumi geisha consequently were known as 'Haori geisha (geisha who wear haori)' or 'haori' for short.
  531. Tatsumi-bashi Bridge
  532. Tatsumi-shinchii: dissolved in 1873.
  533. Tatsumigura (inclusive of the west-facing storeroom and the north-facing kuramae) (a post is attached)
  534. Tatsumune GAUN (the inventor of throstle spinning in the early Meiji period.)
  535. Tatsuno Domain
  536. Tatsuno Domain: Tatsuno-jo Castle
  537. Tatsuno's history book, "Tatsunoshi" was compiled in 1740.
  538. Tatsunosuke ICHIMURA
  539. Tatsunosuke ICHIMURA (1846 - March 15, 1872) was a member of "Shinsengumi" (a group which guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  540. Tatsunosuke ICHIMURA was assigned to ryochoho(long gunner) and Tetsunosuke was ordered to work under Toshizo HIJIKATA (Kai SHIMADA's Eimeiroku [Record of Shinsengumi members]).
  541. Tatsunosuke ONOE
  542. Tatsunosuke ONOE (the first)
  543. Tatsunosuke ONOE (the first): The oldest son of Shoroku ONOE (the second).
  544. Tatsunosuke ONOE (the second): The oldest son of the first.
  545. Tatsunosuke ONOE I
  546. Tatsunosuke ONOE is a Kabuki (traditional drama performed by male actors) actor.
  547. Tatsunyo
  548. Tatsunyo (1780 - December 21, 1865) was a Jodo Shinshu (True Pure Land Sect Buddhism) priest and the 20th Hoshu (high priest) of the Higashi Hongan-ji Temple.
  549. Tatsuo II even wrote that 'he would like more credibility somewhere' in his book, seemingly quite unpleased of the forgery.
  550. Tatsuo KAMON has published a song implying that he had a sauce katsudon in Niigata.
  551. Tatsuo KISHIMOTO
  552. Tatsuo KISHIMOTO (November 13, 1851-April 5, 1912) was a law scholar in Japan.
  553. Tatsuo KISHIMOTO (the founder of Meiji Horitsu Gakko, and its first principal)
  554. Tatsuo MIYAZAKI who would later be a mayor had worked as a secretary of Noda before.
  555. Tatsuo-maru entered the Suruga residence and took the name Ujichika after celebrating his coming-of-age, thereby becoming the head of the Imagawa family.
  556. Tatsuoka-jo Castle
  557. Tatsuomaru moved into Suruga House, 2 years later celebrated coming of age and became the head of the Imagawa family, taking the name Ujichika.
  558. Tatsuomaru's supporters was at the disadvantage.
  559. Tatsushi NARITA
  560. Tatsushi NARITA (1964-) is a Noh actor who plays kotsuzumi-kata (small hand drum player) in the Ko school.
  561. Tatsuta Domain
  562. Tatsuta Domain was a feudal domain that was located in Yamato Province (present-day Tatsuta, Ikaruga-cho, Ikoma-gun, Nara Prefecture).
  563. Tatsuta Electric Wire & Cable Co., Ltd.
  564. Tatsuta River, Tatsuta-ohashi Bridge (a point where Shuntoku Kaido, Juso Kaido and Kiyotaki Kaido intersect)
  565. Tatsuta, who was the older sister of Princess Kariya, gets caught up in this, and was assassinated.
  566. Tatsuta-gawa River, known for the beauty of its autumn foliage described in the "waka" poem by ARIWARA no Narihira, is located in the west, and Tomio-gawa River described in poetry as 'Tomi no Ogawa' is in its east.
  567. Tatsuta-goe Nara Kaido (the Nara Highway passing over Tatsuta)
  568. Tatsuta-hime
  569. Tatsuta-hime (竜田姫) is the god of autumn in Japan.
  570. Tatsuta-jinja Shrine
  571. Tatsuta-jinja Shrine isn't open to the public, but part of its garden can be seen from the car near a rail bridge on the Ichihara side.
  572. Tatsuta-taisha Shrine
  573. Tatsuta-taisha Shrine in Nara Prefecture holds the fujin festival every July 4.
  574. Tatsuta-yama Mountain is believed to be a mountainous region located west of Tatsuta-taisha Shrine and south of Mt. Shigi, however, there is no mountain by that name on the map.
  575. Tatsutaage
  576. Tatsutaage (竜田揚げ) is similar to karaage.
  577. Tatsutagoe
  578. Tatsutagoe Nara-kaido Road (Kokubugoe and Tatsunogoe) and Toge-mura Village (Kawachi Province) - Tatsuno-mura Village
  579. Tatsutano Kazenokami-no-matsuri Festival
  580. Tatsuto NUKI wrote (in 'Was the wife of Yoshiyasu ICHIJO Yoritomo's sister younger than he? This theory is considered again,' "Kamakura" 84, published in 1997) that he placed importance on the death year written in "Azumakagami" and followed it.
  581. Tatsutsura HASEBE
  582. Tatsuya
  583. Tatsuya HORI (Fifth governor of Hokkaido)
  584. Tatsuya showed its policy to continue gyudon sales but had to often change the prices due to the effect of BSE (200 yen - 300 yen).
  585. Tattsuke
  586. Taue-meshi
  587. Taue-meshi refers to food eaten by people who work in rice fields on the day of rice planting.
  588. Taunagi (Asian swamp eel)
  589. Tawara no Onda (Shinto ritual; designated as significant intangible folk cultural asset)
  590. Tawara no onda
  591. Tawara no onda (Ta-asobi performed as a shrine ritual in Tawara), Isobe no Omita (Dengaku performed in the shrine festival in Isobe) and Kiragawa no Onta Matsuri (the Festival of Ontamachiman-gu Shrine in Kiragawa) are designated as intangible folk-cultural property.
  592. Tawara's Onda rice-planting shrine ritual (December 27, 2000)
  593. Tawara-no-onda Ritual(December 27, 2000, Kyoto Prefecture)
  594. Tawaramoto Domain
  595. Tawaramoto Domain existed in Tawaramoto, Toichi-gun, Yamato Province (present-day Tawaramoto, Tawaramoto-cho, Shiki-gun, Nara Prefecture).
  596. Tawaramoto Domain was ruled by the Hirano clan.
  597. Tawaraya (Kyoto): Founded in 1755.
  598. Tawawa-chan
  599. Tawawa-chan is the mascot of Kyoto Tower, which is located in Shimogyo Ward, Kyoto city.
  600. Tax Bureau, Account Bureau
  601. Tax exemption for kanmotsu needed the approval from Daijokan (Grand Council of State) and Minbusho and so kokumen sho was basically zatsueki menden which approved the exemption of odd-job tasks.
  602. Tax imposition in the ikkoku heikinyaku system was carried out based upon ota-bumi (cadastre created in the Kamakura period) created by kokuga (provincial government offices).
  603. Tax is collected by prefectures and municipalities in exchange for the provision of public services.
  604. Tax payment by silver begining with Kinkagin imposition and the standardization of tax payment by gold with Ichijobenbo were promoted as important opportunities for solving kanden problems.
  605. Tax rate
  606. Tax rate in Edo era was 40 % on the revenue and this was very high when compared with those in other Asian countries.
  607. Tax rate since May 1, 2006.
  608. Tax was collected from ikkoku heikin-yaku from the accredited and unified shoen through shokan (an officer governing shoen), and koryo underwent regional restructuring into new units of gun, go, and ho accordingly.
  609. Taxation
  610. Taxation on land was implemented according to kokudaka from the time of Taiko kenchi (the land survey by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI) until the land-tax reform in the Meiji period.
  611. Taxation on the doso and sakaya by the Muromachi bakufu
  612. Taxation on tobacco started in January, 1876, when the Tobacco Ad Duty Stamp Tax Law went into effect, by which tax was imposed on tobacco in the form of affixing stamp.
  613. Taxes that Toyomasu pays
  614. Taxes that should have been paid were never paid, and it used them as its own income instead.
  615. Taxes were composed of so, yo, cho and zoyo.
  616. Taxes were uniformly imposed on everyone by eliminating any chance of using discretion.
  617. Taxi
  618. Taxi advertising
  619. Taxi companies that use a taxi stand may need to pay a usage charge to the facility owner to purchase the right to drive taxis in the facility area.
  620. Taxi driver
  621. Taxi drivers mechanically open the left back door for customers most of the time (for some taxis, the driver goes to the back door and opens it for the customers) so the passengers do not need to open the door by themselves.
  622. Taxi drivers must have a Class II driver license.
  623. Taxi drivers need to let people around them know about stopping, change of direction, boarding and exiting of passengers, etc. by using the turn signals and hazard indicator.
  624. Taxi fare
  625. Taxi fares used to be the same across all taxi companies in an area in accordance with the "same fare in the same region system," but this system was abolished in 1993.
  626. Taxi service
  627. Taxi services
  628. Taxi stand
  629. Taximeter
  630. Taximeters are required to be inspected annually (actually screening validity is one year) according to the Measurement Act.
  631. Taximeters are set under a lead seal (inspected stamp) so that no one can manipulate the meter, for example, adjusting the inside of the meter.
  632. Taxis
  633. Taxis are operated in the southwestern transportation area of the prefecture, which is the same area as Kawagoe City, Tokorozawa City, Higashimatsuyama City, Hanno City and Wako City.
  634. Taxis in Japan
  635. Taxis operated with private cars without permission, license, or qualification are called "Shiro-taku" (literally, white taxi, meaning unlicensed taxis) and are illegal.
  636. Taxis run around everywhere in the area 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, with radio communication means.
  637. Taxis taking on a role of local anticrime and disaster-preventing activities
  638. Taxis usually use the frequency band of 400MHz.
  639. Taxonomic position
  640. Taxonomically, each of them is dramatically different, but 2 and 3 belong to the same green alga and somewhat closely related.
  641. Taxonomically, edible algae are categorized in mutually distant groups, as follows:
  642. Tayasu Tokugawa family (ditto)
  643. Tayu
  644. Tayu (geisha of the highest rank) wear almost the same makeup as a geigi and always apply ohaguro.
  645. Tayu (top ranked Geisha) (Shimabara, Kyoto City)
  646. Tayu (yukaku) (The highest ranking prostitute died a natural death during the Horeki era (1753-1764).)
  647. Tayu in Shimabara
  648. Tayu in Yoshiwara had disappeared by the middle of the 18th century (during the Horeki era).
  649. Tayu no Gen: A person of influence in Chikushi.
  650. Tayu no Myobu: Genji's foster sister.
  651. Tayu was a courtesan of the highest rank.
  652. Tayu was a waka friend of Rengetsu OTAGAKI and Rengetsu considered Tayu to be 'a talented person though a courtesan.'
  653. Tayu's grave is also located here.
  654. Tayu: high class courtesans whose numbers were very limited in Yoshiwara.
  655. Tazaemon attempted to intercede for the two of them, even though he knew all about the matter.
  656. Tazu no Muradori (also known as Okitsu Shiranami)
  657. Tazuko SAKANE, the first female director in Japanese cinema, worked as an assistant director for Mizoguchi's films before World War II.
  658. Tazukuri
  659. Tazukuri (also called tatsukuri) is a dried or cooked product of young anchovies.
  660. Tazukuri has been eaten to pray for a good harvest because sardines were employed as a useful fertilizer for plowed lands.
  661. Tazukuri is a term used in reference to Gomame (small sardines) that have been dried and then finished in a sweet sauce of sugar, mirin, soy sauce and sake.
  662. Tea
  663. Tea (Ujicha) cultivation is thriving, with Gyokuro as a specialty.
  664. Tea Cups: Must be one year or older (No unaccompanied children three years old or younger) 300 yen
  665. Tea House "Tanan"
  666. Tea House Names Retained in the Name of a Location
  667. Tea Houses Seen in Ukiyoe (Traditional Japanese Wood Block Prints)
  668. Tea Industry
  669. Tea Industry Center
  670. Tea Rooms - Kodai-ji Temple (Higashiyama Ward): Shigure-tei, Kasa-tei (both Important Cultural Properties)
  671. Tea Tasting Methods
  672. Tea Utensils Which Juko Loved
  673. Tea bowl
  674. Tea bowl, teacup, and Kyusu (small teapot)
  675. Tea brought from China to Japan was drunk for medical purpose as Eisai, who had been to Southern Song (dynasty of China) and explained the effects of tea in his 'Kissa Yojoki' (Drink Tea and Prolong Life, a Note on Drinking Green Tea for Good Health).
  676. Tea ceremonies, which started in the Muromachi period, were developed to perfection by SEN no Rikyu and a new architectural style for chashitsu (tea room) was born.
  677. Tea ceremony
  678. Tea ceremony in Hakozaki (June 14, 1587)
  679. Tea ceremony sensu are slightly smaller than regular folding fans, and they are also called chazensu (literally, tea sensu).
  680. Tea ceremony using shin daisu is the spiritual and theoretical fundamental in the tea ceremony, and is known as the secrets or esoterica, and it's instruction comes last.
  681. Tea ceremony: perfected by SEN no Rikyu
  682. Tea house
  683. Tea houses modeled after Joan still remain in different places.
  684. Tea is served with Kyoto kaiseki dishes (a simple meal served before a ceremonial tea), and here hojicha is quite often served.
  685. Tea is whipped using a huge tea bowl using a diameter over 30 cm and weight of 6 to 7 kg and a 35 cm long tea stirrer and served to worshippers.
  686. Tea jars were most valued at first; however, chaire (tea containers) became more important in place of jars in the age of Rikyu.
  687. Tea kettle type
  688. Tea leaves from Makinoharadaichi, including Kikugawa city, used to grow to become thick and hard because they were exposed to longer hours of sunlight.
  689. Tea leaves picked by hand are steamed later the same day and then they are dried without doing junen (crumpling up leaves.)
  690. Tea leaves stop fermenting immediately when they are heat-treated soon after being picked.
  691. Tea making utensils changed from those of simple and quiet understated elegance in the past to, for example, natsume (a powdered tea container) of opulent gold-relief lacquer ware and tea making utensils continued to become more extravagant and conspicuous with time from then onward to the present day.
  692. Tea manufacturers use a large specially built roaster.
  693. Tea plantations are called "chaen (tea gardens)" and tea manufacturers are called "chasi (tea masters)."
  694. Tea processing factory
  695. Tea room
  696. Tea room (Korinan) (an important cultural property)
  697. Tea room attachments: 1 tsukubai (a stone washbasin)
  698. Tea room name: Izumiya
  699. Tea room name: Kawachiya
  700. Tea room name: Kikuya
  701. Tea room name: Kinokuniya
  702. Tea room name: Otowaya (usher)
  703. Tea room name: Tsuruya
  704. Tea room name: Yamazakiya
  705. Tea room name: Yorozuya
  706. Tea rooms
  707. Tea shops
  708. Tea stalls stand side by side on Uji bridge street and Byodo-in street in the center of Uji City, where tourists are often seen having tea.
  709. Tea that was brought and cultivated in Japan during the Heian Period was made from the new (or old) leaves picked in spring and heat treated by steaming or boiling before being dried in sunlight in 'hoiro' (the structure is different from modern one).
  710. Tea utensils
  711. Tea utensils he selected were given names from waka poems and later became known as chuko meibutsu [定訳不明].
  712. Tea utensils is a generic term for utensils used in the Japanese tea ceremony.
  713. Tea whole sale store Kanbayashi Shunsho Honten Ltd.
  714. Tea-ceremony dishes are designed to enhance the taste of matcha (finely powdered green tea) and kaiseki ryori sake (Japanese rice wine).
  715. Tea-grinding hand mill; it is believed that Kukai brought this back from the Tang dynasty China.
  716. Teaburi
  717. Teaburi were generally made in pairs.
  718. Teaburi', also referred to as 'shuro,' were relatively small hibachi used to warm the hands.
  719. Teacher (priests designated as teachers
  720. Teacher Training Institute of Industrial Vocational School in prefectures and cities
  721. Teacher qualification tests at the Ministry of Education
  722. Teacher qualification tests at the Ministry of Education (abbreviated as bunken) were qualification tests to give the teacher status for middle schools or schools for teacher training, and were conducted for sixty-three years between 1885 and 1948.
  723. Teacher training in industrial schools and teacher training institute of industrial schools
  724. Teacher training in temporary teacher training schools, normal schools, middle schools and women's higher schools
  725. Teaching
  726. Teaching material
  727. Teaching other than Buddhism, or Gedo, seek the principle of Inga (cause and effect) of life by submitting to god's teaching and will (or outside), and doesn't preach the principle itself.
  728. Teaching shows how Amida came to establish the Vows, which is expounded in "Bussetsu Muryoju-kyo" (the Sutra of the Buddha of Immeasurable Life); the Vows themselves; and how everything relies on Amida's directing of virtues based on his wisdom and compassion.
  729. Teaching styles changed from one-to-one lessons given by a master to a pupil to class lessons in which a host of students practiced the same movement and kata in response to orders from a master.
  730. Teaching-type Shinto
  731. Teachings
  732. Teahouse (Hassoseki)
  733. Teahouse (consisting of the Kaiin-seki Tearoom, Masudoko-seki Tearoom, mizuya and 2 six tatami mat size rooms)
  734. Teahouse Shokoken
  735. Teahouse of Myokian: located in Ooyamazaki-cho, Kyoto.
  736. Teahouses
  737. Teahouses called sukiya first appeared in the Azuchi-Momoyama Period.
  738. Teahouses developed as retail venues that supported areas and, provided a place to drink teat and eat Japanese traditional snacks.
  739. Teahouses: Rakuyo-tei, Shogetsu-ken and Nyoze-an
  740. Teahouses: Shoin, Baiin, Chikuin
  741. Teal
  742. Team guarding the base of the Shinsen-gumi
  743. Teaming up with Gekidan Zenshinza (theater group), Imai, who started an independent production company called Shinsei Eigasha with Satsuo YAMAMOTO and Fumio KAMEI, released "Dokkoi ikiteiru" (And Yet We Live), depicting the lives of day laborers, in 1951.
  744. Tearfully saying goodbye to him, his wife gave him a tamakushige (a casket) and warned him, 'Never, ever open the casket if you want to come back again.'
  745. Tebamoto (drumette)
  746. Tebasaki (chicken wing tip)
  747. Tebichi
  748. Tecchiri
  749. Technical Materials Center: completed in 1930, a registered tangible cultural property
  750. Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Hiroshima Higher Technical School (1939-)=> Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Hiroshima Vocational Technical School
  751. Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Kanazawa Higher Technical School (1943) => Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Kanazawa Vocational Technical School
  752. Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Nagoya Higher Technical School (1929-)=> Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Nagoya Vocational Technical School
  753. Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Osaka Higher Technical School (1920-)=> Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Osaka Vocational Technical School
  754. Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Sendai Higher Technical School (1943)=> Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Sendai Vocational Technical School
  755. Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Tokyo Higher Technical School (1899-)=> Higher Technical Teacher Training School attached to Tokyo Institute of Technology.
  756. Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Yokohama Higher Technical School (1929-)=> Technical Teacher Training School Attached to Yokohama Vocational Technical School
  757. Technical officers who did the practical work of military art were divided into these two statuses and the military aristocracies such as Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan) or Kanmu-Heishi (Taira clan) and so on, who were staying in Kyoto, were in the shodaibu status and the majority of local bushi were in the samurai status.
  758. Technical officials who were in a different official system from Shitokan.
  759. Technical school (special training school), various kinds of schools, night school (night education), and correspondence course
  760. Technical term
  761. Technically, constituting a system independent of regular railway lines is one of the features of Shinkansen that differentiate it from high-speed railway lines in other countries, and another feature is its uniqueness, for example, employing the distributed traction system.
  762. Technically, he was not a ninja, but he controlled Iga ninja.
  763. Technically, some refer to Aikido as Daito-ryu Aiki Jujutsu, or the Ueshiba method, viewing it as one faction of Daito-ryu Aiki Jujutsu.
  764. Technically, the Meiji era began on January 1 of the 4th year of the Keio era.
  765. Technically, this is expressed as 'seimai tokusei (properties of rice with respect to polishing) is durable due to its polishing ratio/high degree polishing.'
  766. Technique
  767. Technique and Style of Painting
  768. Technique and size
  769. Technique called the haboku (the broken-ink technique)
  770. Techniques
  771. Techniques are taught to children in local neighborhood and there is a display of swimming on August 10, the last day of the event.
  772. Techniques in the Paleolithic period include blade technique to remove vertically long flakes and Setouchi technique to remove horizontally long flakes, however, flakes in the Jomon period seem to be made more freely by hitting and cracking the core and there were not strict standards.
  773. Techniques of Noh
  774. Techniques of kodachijutsu mainly consist of irimi (technique for avoiding an attack by stepping into the dead zone of the attacker) and also includes many techniques like jujutu (Japanese self-defense martial art without weapons).
  775. Techniques of yuzen
  776. Techniques to slip into the enemy camp to gather intelligence are described in Ninjutsu-sho (book of Ninjutsu) such as Mansei (or Bansei) Shukai and Shonin-ki.
  777. Technologies for producing iron swords in Japan reached levels comparable to that of China in the Heian period.
  778. Technology
  779. Technology Research Laboratory (Keihanna), Shimadzu Corporation
  780. Technology Research Laboratory, Shimadzu Corporation
  781. Technology park
  782. Tedai, as the name suggests, worked devotedly for their master and banto.
  783. Tegara
  784. Tegara is a hairdressing cloth to wrap around the topknot of traditional Japanese women's hairstyles.
  785. Tegatana (Ceremonial Hand Movement)
  786. Tegatana (pronounced either Shuto or Tegatana)
  787. Tegatana as Etiquette
  788. Tegoto
  789. Tegoto being an instrumental part is divided into two, where the former half starts slowly and then gradually becomes faster.
  790. Tegoto can also be considered as being a quasi-independent movement.
  791. Tegoto is a long part of instrumental music sandwiched between vocal music in a piece by an instrumental trio, which is a collective term for jiuta (a genre of traditional songs with accompaniment by shamisen (three-stringed lute)), sokyoku (koto (thirteen-stringed Japanese zither) music), and kokyugaku (Chinese fiddle music).
  792. Tegoto is a typical example of such cases.
  793. Tegoto of "Sasa no Tsuyu" (by Kengyo KIKUOKA) contains quite a lot of kakeai, and this is said to represent the exchange of pouring of sake.
  794. Tegotomono (a form of Japanese chamber music)
  795. Tegotomono (a group of musical pieces that have genuine tegoto)
  796. Tegotomono is said to have been firstly established as a classifying genre in 'Shin utabukuro' (the New Collection of Koto Music in History) published in 1789.
  797. Tegotomono is the style of composition which has instrumental parts (here, it is also called "tegotomono-form") or the kind of songs in sankyoku music which consists of jiuta, so (or koto) music and kokyu (Chinese fiddle) music.
  798. Tegotomono itself is thought to have emerged around the Genroku era and "Sarashi" by kengyo FUKAKUSA, "Rokudan Renbo" by Jirosan KISHINO, "San Dan Jishi" (triple lion) by kengyo SAYAMA and so on are known as the works of the early period.
  799. Tegotomono, which has long instrumental sections, is played most often, and the repertoire contains many pieces.
  800. Tehodoki-kyoju (novice instructor)
  801. Tehodokimono (pieces for beginners)
  802. Tehon-kei' was made for the purpose of teaching penmanship.
  803. Tei KATAYAMA
  804. Tei MORITA, one of the supporters of the imperial succession code theory, argues that Fukai-no-Joten/ Fukaijoten includes plural contents and one of them is the law related to the imperial succession, and he also supposed that the code contains another law related to the Imperial Throne.
  805. Tei, ryogo sezu. (The Emperor did not understand.)
  806. Teian (Jodo sect) asks: Do the eight volumes of the sutra Hokkekyo contain a Buddhist invocation 'Nenbutsu'?
  807. Teibi Yakujo
  808. Teibi Yakujo were regulations relating to the control of visitors to Japan which were agreed between the Yi-Dynasty and the So clan in Tsushima in 1547.
  809. Teibo Matsuri (embankment festival) (August 15)
  810. Teien koezu (old sketch map of the garden) (painted by Tanyu KANO)
  811. Teigen-Kegon-kyo-Ongi
  812. Teigo IBA
  813. Teigo IBA (February 19, 1847 - October 22, 1926) was the second Director General of Sumitomo.
  814. Teigo IBA alone visited and took over for the shihainin, Moriaki KUBO to calm the people down.
  815. Teigo IBA checked Takamaro's personality and invited Takamaro and his three elder brothers, Sanetsune TOKUDAIJI, Kinmochi SAIONJI and Michinori NAKANOIN to a restaurant near Sanno-jinja Shrine at Miyakezaka and explained the inside details of the Sumitomo family and requested that Takamaro join the family.
  816. Teigo IBA retired here in 1904 and passed away here in 1926.
  817. Teigo-ken Notes: the pictures of Chinese phoenix and dragons were printed and it was issued as 'Military Currency by the Government of the Empire of Japan.'
  818. Teigyoku-ken Teahouse
  819. Teiichi wrote many books about Chakaiseki (dishes served before the tea ceremony), and began a serialization concerning the 'Kitcho Tsurezurebanashi' in a magazine "Kurashi no Techo" (Notes on Daily Life) in the form of interviews with Yasuji HANAMORI in 1969.
  820. Teiichiro DATE
  821. Teiiwaku: "Chin ni taisuru mono wa darezo." (The Emperor asked: "Who are you?")
  822. Teiiwaku: "Ikan ga kore shin no kotoku naru ya." (The Emperor asked: "What could be the true merits?")
  823. Teiiwaku: "Nani wo motte kotoku nashi ya." (The Emperor asked: "How come there are no merits?")
  824. Teiji KADOWAKI was one of the disputants who criticize this Kawachi Dynasty Theory.
  825. Teiji NAKAI
  826. Teiji NAKAI (January 4, 1932 -) was a dyer from Kyoto City.
  827. Teiji no in (Emperor Uda)
  828. Teiji-no-in
  829. Teiji-no-in is the palace in which Emperor Uda who reigned during the Heian period resided after his abdication located on the western side of Nishinotoin-dori Street, in 13-cho and 14-cho, 7-jo/2-bo (where a "jo" is row of sections running east-west and a "bo" is a column of sections running north-south) in Sakyo (the left (eastern) side of the city).
  830. Teijixin no Uta-awase: Held in 913
  831. Teika
  832. Teika left a note in the end of the book, 'Make sure not to take this book outside the window' which instructed his future generations never to allow the book to be taken out of the house.
  833. Teikaku style
  834. Teikan (Imperial Crown) Style
  835. Teikan (Imperial Crown) Style is a Japan-west blended architectural style that is a modern architecture; a reinforced concrete building, which was popular in the early Showa period, with a Japanese tiled roof.
  836. Teikan (Imperial Crown) Style was generated against modernism architecture in the context of Nationalism that appeared in the 1930's.
  837. Teikan (Imperial Crown) Style; a modern building with a Japanese traditional tile roof, has extremely characteristic features.
  838. Teikan TO
  839. Teikan TO "Koshikoinpu" 1773
  840. Teikan TO (August 13, 1732 - October 8, 1797), written as 藤 貞幹 in Japanese, was a scholar of yusoku-kojitsu (studies of the traditional protocol of the Imperial Court, courtiers, and leading samurai houses) who lived during the mid-Edo period.
  841. Teikan is said to be the progenitor of Japanese philology and bibliography.
  842. Teikan-ji Temple → Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) (MINAMOTO no Yoritomo → Moriyasu AYUSE (ruling half of the territory)) → Imperial family (Hachijo Nyoin → Emperor Gouda, etc.).
  843. Teikan-zu (Paintings depicting the deeds of famous Chinese emperors)
  844. Teiki (History of Emperors) "Emperor Kazan"
  845. Teiki (records of Emperor's family tree)
  846. Teiki is a field which collects the genealogy of successive emperors or Imperial family trees.
  847. Teikin
  848. Teikin Orai
  849. Teikokan - Built as a rest area on the bank of Osawa-no-ike Pond during the mid Edo period and relocated in 1868.
  850. Teikokuzaiseikakushin kai (conference on reform of imperial financial affairs)
  851. Teikokuzaiseikakushin kai was a political group established in the middle of the Meiji Period.
  852. Teikyoin
  853. Teikyoin, a daughter of Munetake TOKUGAWA and wife of Harutomi TOKUGAWA
  854. Teimatato: "Ikangakoreshitainodaiichiginaruya." (The Emperor asked again: "What is the ultimate teaching of Buddhism?")
  855. Teinosuke KINUGASA
  856. Teinosuke KINUGASA (his real name was Teinosuke KOGAME) (January 1, 1896 - February 26, 1982) was an actor and film director in the Taisho and Showa periods.
  857. Teinosuke KINUGASA's debut as a director
  858. Teio (monarch)
  859. Teippon has the implication that no subsequent objections will be raised.
  860. Teiran (basket for tea set)
  861. Teiran is one of tea utensils used in Senchado (Japanese tea ceremony using Sencha [brewed green tea]).
  862. Teiran is one of the tools introduced to Japan upon the arrival of Sencha from China.
  863. Teiran is originally used at Nodate (open-air tea ceremony) and is not often used at indoor tea ceremonies.
  864. Teiran was thus developed for the purpose of taking a set of tea ceremony utensils outdoors.
  865. Teiren KUDARANOKONIKISHI.
  866. Teisaku TAKAGI
  867. Teisaku TAKAGI (December 18, 1848 - January 14, 1933) was a feudal retainer of Kuwana Domain and a member of Shinsengumi (a group who guarded Kyoto) at the end of Edo period.
  868. Teisaku was involved with the establishment of Hitotsubashi University and appointed to a professorship in commercial book-keeping.
  869. Teiseihakushu (Japanese sake with low rice polishing rate)
  870. Teiseihakushu is a kind of Japanese sake developed around 2005.
  871. Teisen (becoming a monk) and evacuation to Omi Province
  872. Teishi also left the imperial palace and returned to her parents' home of Nijo Palace, but after the shock of witnessing the Imperial police (or Kebiishi) arrest her brothers, who were in hiding at the house, she cut off her hair in preparation for entry into a monastery.
  873. Teishi had been awarded Jusanmi, and her entry into the palace was forthcoming, Yorinaga started to say `If Teishi is enthroned before Masaruko, I will retire,' and Tadazane also persistently asked the Cloistered Emperor for Masaruko to be enthroned; Masaruko became empress on March 14.
  874. Teishi was a 'Chugu' but all empresses who were 'Hi saigou' were 'Kisainomiya.'
  875. Teishi was called Kisai no miya (empress), and Akiko, chugu.
  876. Teishi's attractive personality can be felt even today through the lively description in the "The Pillow Book," written by her lady-in-waiting (993-Teishi's death), Sei Shonagon.
  877. Teishi's father, Michitaka, is said to have had a jovial personality, who loved sake and telling jokes, or 'Sarugogoto.'
  878. Teishi's mother, Kishi, served as Naishi no jo (looking after the sacred sword and jewels) of Emperor Enyu and was known as Ko no naishi due to her mastery of Classical Chinese, which was rare for a woman and led to her being invited to the poetry parties at the imperial palace.
  879. Teishi's position became precarious when she lost her main supporters.
  880. Teishi/Sadako was the Emperor's wife already, and she had already given birth to the First Prince, Prince Atsuyasu, whom the Emperor favored, but Michinaga pushed Teishi/Sadako to become an Empress and he daringly implemented the system of One Emperor, Two Empresses.
  881. Teishi/Sadako, who unwillingly became an Empress because of Michinaga, died in December of that year after giving birth to a princess.
  882. Teishiin no sake kassen contest
  883. Teishinko-ki
  884. Teishinko-ki is the diary of Kanpaku Dajodaijin (imperial regent and grand minister) FUJIWARA no Tadahira.
  885. Teishitsu Gigeiin (Imperial art expert)
  886. Teishitsu Gigeiin was a system for honoring craftspeople and artisans, which had been operated by the Imperial Household Ministry since 1890 until right after the end of the war (World War II).
  887. Teisho TSUGA
  888. Teisho TSUGA (male, 1718 - circa. 1794) was a yomihon writer, Confucian scholar, and physician during the middle of Edo period.
  889. Teishoku (set meal)
  890. Teishoku are also often offered at company and school cafeterias.
  891. Teishoku is a style of serving food frequently found in Japanese restaurants.
  892. Teishu-ken Tea House
  893. Teishugakuha
  894. Teisuke AKIYAMA
  895. Teisuke AKIYAMA (August 24, 1868 - January 19, 1950) was a statesman and businessman from Okayama Prefecture.
  896. Teisuke turmoil
  897. Teisuke turmoil was an uprising which broke out in Niigata Prefecture and Kashiwazaki Prefecture (present-day Niigata Prefecture) in April 1872.
  898. Teitoku MATSUNAGA
  899. Teitoku MATSUNAGA (1571-January 3, 1654) was a haiku poet, kajin (waka [a traditional Japanese poem of thirty-one syllables] poet) and a scholar of the study of waka.
  900. Teitoku MATSUNAGA was one of his disciples.
  901. Teitoku MATSUNAGA, a haiku poet, was Hisahide's grandson.
  902. Teitoku's style of haiku remained within word plays, but he established a large school as the founder of haikai of the Teimon school and produced many talented persons.
  903. Teiwa (he received the castration penalty as a prisoner of war)
  904. Teiyu AMANO, the first president of Dokkyo University, had invited him to take up a position there, and in 1964 he accepted, entering the Department of Foreign Languages as the professor in charge of Philosophy and Foreign Literature.
  905. Teizo WADO
  906. Teizo WADO (year of birth and death unknown) was a member of Shinsengumi (special police who guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  907. Tejime
  908. Tejime (Japanese custom of ceremonial rhythmic hand clapping, performed at the end of a special event) and Teuchi
  909. Tejime consists of different rhythms, numbers of claps and calls depending on the region.
  910. Tejime is a Japanese custom of rhythmic hand clapping performed in time with the calls of one participant in order to celebrate the fact that an event has concluded without trouble.
  911. Tekagami
  912. Tekagami "Moshiogusa Album of Exemplary Calligraphy" (241 detached segments)
  913. Tekagami also became one of a brides' important household articles for samurai families and court nobles.
  914. Tekagami is a book in which these pieces are placed together.
  915. Teketeke has become known recently and is also a similar creature as Yokai of footsteps, but totally a subject to be feared.
  916. Teki-juku of Koan OGATA in Osaka
  917. Tekichu (bull's-eye)
  918. Tekigaiso
  919. Tekigaiso' located in Ogikubo, Suginami Ward (Suginami Ward) was originally the suburban second home of Tatsukichi IRISAWA, the head court physician of Emperor Taisho.
  920. Tekigaiso:
  921. Tekijuku in Osaka established by Koan OGATA
  922. Tekishi (dizi): Contemporary Chinese fue.
  923. Tekishi are divided into two types; kyokuteki of pitch C or D, and hoteki of pitch F and G.
  924. Tekison UDA, "Tayu" (太夫) 1920, "Minato" (港) (Port) 1921, "Kuri" (栗) (Chestnuts) 1935, "Mishiodono" (御塩殿) 1944, "Kiyomizudera" (清水寺) (Kiyomizu-dera Temple) 1957
  925. Tekisui-en Garden
  926. Tekisuian (滴水庵) (Registered Tangible Cultural Property)
  927. Tekiya
  928. Tekiya (a street vendor or peddler at local festivals in and around the precincts of shrines and temples)
  929. Tekiya (peddlers)
  930. Tekiya also used magic shows until the early Showa Period and many used tricks such as the 'cutting the arm with a sword' seen in the 'gama no abura uri' performance to bring in customers.
  931. Tekiya and Organized Crime (yakuza, gangsters, gamblers, sujimono [a kind of gamblers]).
  932. Tekiya and Prostitutes
  933. Tekiya are a type of 'stallholder and peddler' and are a part of an area's traditional culture.
  934. Tekiya are merchants who sell blessed items or lucky charms at niwaba.
  935. Tekiya are merchants who sell items such as food or toys on the street or stalls set up in the ground of shrines or temples, on the approach to them or in temple towns during festivals, markets, and fairs.
  936. Tekiya are occasionally still called yashi even now.
  937. Tekiya differ from current street performers, who are amateurs or without any cultural aspect.
  938. Tekiya is basically a traditional ancient Japanese vocation in which one travels looking for business in locations where a large number of people are expected, mainly around the sando (an approach to the temple) or precincts of temples and shrines, for rites and festivals, fairs, and annual events.
  939. Tekiya were also called Shinno and are known as businessman while gamblers are known toseinin (gamblers).
  940. Tekka
  941. Tekka - ancient trial in which one grabbed a red-hot iron bar to make a judgment on contentions.
  942. Tekka - character of losing temper quickly.
  943. Tekka - describes bullets flying through the air and swords that are fiercely crossed, implying a battlefield or a dreadful scene.
  944. Tekka - guns and swords produced by smithery
  945. Tekka - means 'maguro no zuke' which is red flesh of tuna soaked in soy sauce or soy-based sauce because the color of it looks like that of red hot iron.
  946. Tekka - sparks flying through the air from swords and bullets from guns.
  947. Tekka Zuka (Remains of Courts)
  948. Tekka denbo
  949. Tekka denbo' is another word for 'denbo hada,' 'isami hada,' 'kioi hada' and 'ninkyo hada.'
  950. Tekka geisha
  951. Tekka geisha mainly referred to Tatsumi geisha in Fukagawa during the Edo Period.
  952. Tekka hada
  953. Tekka hada is synonymous with 'Take wo watta yo' (straightforward), and was used as a word to express frank, manlike, and open-hearted female character.
  954. Tekka hada', or simply 'tekka' represents a character of a woman who fights at the drop of a hat, but who is frank and generous, and doesn't hold a grudge against anybody.
  955. Tekka is a synonym of higisho (taking of a religious oath with red-hot iron), and trials held according to higisho is called 'tekka saiban' or 'tekka no saiban' (literally, 'red-hot iron trial,' in which one grabbed a red-hot iron bar to make a judgment based on the appearance of the burn on the hand).
  956. Tekka is the sate of red hot iron or sparks generated during forging.
  957. Tekka no ma' is a place or a space where sparks fly, implying a battle field or a dreadful scene.
  958. Tekka originally meant the state of red hot iron as well as sparks generated by the forging process, and it came to refer particularly to teppo kaji (gun smithery) and also to katana kaji (sword smithery), latter of which has been closely related to Shinto rituals and samurai warriors.
  959. Tekka zuka - a burial mound constructed to comfort spirits of the dead and to offer prayers at the site of higisho disputes over property line, right to enter a mountain, land ownership and so on.
  960. Tekka zuka also exist in Tetsu Town and Yawara village.
  961. Tekka-maki: the nori-maki with sliced, scraped, or finely chopped tuna spiced with wasabi placed at the core.
  962. Tekkamaki (tuna sushi roll)
  963. Tekkamaki (tuna sushi roll): Hosomaki using tuna as a filling
  964. Tekkamaki is a kind of sushi (maki-zushi [sushi roll]).
  965. Tekkan also sincerely faced with his love for Akiko, and he summarised their love into the poetry collection, "Midaregami".
  966. Tekkan launched the publication called "Myojo" in 1900, and with Akiko YOSANO at his side, he was able to create the golden age of romantic tanka.
  967. Tekkan, who had been editing 'Myojo', appreciated Akiko's talent and encouraged her to contribute to Myojo.
  968. Tekko (covering for the back of the hand and wrist), Kyahan (gaiters), and Dochu zashi (a kind of sword)
  969. Tekkosen (armored warships)
  970. Tekkotsutobi
  971. Tekkotsutobi is a workman who operates a crane to hoist and assemble (also called 'takekata' or 'tatekomi') steel members such as columns and beams manufactured in iron factories to construct steel buildings.
  972. Teko' is cut off, then 'Nakago' which becomes the grip of a sword is heated, forged and welded.
  973. Tekomai (Japanese Traditional Dance)
  974. Tekomai is a dance performed to lead floats or omikoshi (portable shrine) in a festival.
  975. Tekomai, which is now performed mostly by young women in festivals, originated from geisha in male clothing.
  976. Tekona
  977. Tekona is the name of a woman who is believed to have lived in Mama, Katsushika, Shimosa Province (present-day Ichikawa City, Chiba Prefecture) before the Nara Period.
  978. Tekone-zushi (a type of sushi: raw fish placed on top of a bowl of cooked rice)
  979. Tel: 058-262-0104
  980. Tel: 075-332-8111 (the main switchboard number)
  981. Tel: 075-381-7121 (the main switchboard number)
  982. Tel: 075-561-1191(main telephone)
  983. Tel: 075-681-3111 (the main switchboard number)
  984. Tel: 075-791-1666
  985. Telegraph
  986. Telephone
  987. Telephone Number: Tel. 0774-63-1122/Fax. 0774-63-4781
  988. Telephone calls
  989. Telephone number
  990. Telephone number: 0773-75-8836
  991. Telephone poles around the site are labeled 'Kinugasa Stadium' even today.
  992. Telephone service ? Manchuria Electric Telegram and Telephone Corporation
  993. Telephones, telegrams, faxes, and cell-phones
  994. Television Broadcast Towers
  995. Television Dramas
  996. Television Programs
  997. Television Variety Shows
  998. Television programs
  999. Tell your colleagues that Master Togashi will soon come here.'
  1000. Telling the monk that 'the battle fought between on the land and sea is unforgettable,' Yoshitsune recalls details of the battle, that is, taking back his bow at the risk of his life, by riding on his horse into the sea to avoid the enemy and taking it from where he had dropped it.


320001 ~ 321000

Previous Page    Next page
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 

オンラインWikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス(英和)
鍋田辞書
オンライン英語辞書