释义 |
Examples:Wakayama prefecture in central Japan—Matsuyama, city in Japan—Aichi (prefecture in Japan)—Niigata, a city and prefecture in Japan—Koshihikari rice (variety of rice popular in Japan)—Chen Tianhua (1875-1905), anti-Qing revolutionary from Hunan, drowned himself in Japan in 1905—Enjo-kōsai or "compensated dating", a practice which originated in Japan where older men give money or luxury gifts women for their companionship and sexual favors—minister of defense (esp. in Japan)—Rumphius' slit shell (Entemnotrochus rumphii), found in Japan and Taiwan—moyamoya disease (rare brain disease first diagnosed in Japan)—Satsuma, the name of a former feudal domain in Japan, and of a former province, a battleship, a district, a peninsula etc—Nagoya, city in Japan (old spelling)—nattō, a type of fermented soybean, popular as a breakfast food in Japan—Ōsaka, a city and prefecture in Japan—matsutake (Tricholoma matsutake), edible mushroom considered a great delicacy in Japan—Tamagawa city in Akita prefecture, Japan—Shiga prefecture in central Japan—Nagano city and prefecture in central Japan—Fukushima prefecture in north Japan—Fukuoka, city in Kyushyu, Japan—Jianzhen or Ganjin (688-763), Tang Buddhist monk, who crossed Japan after several unsuccessful attempts, influential in Japanese Buddhism—Minamata disease (mercury poisoning found in Southern Japan in 1956)—Guo Xiaochuan (1919-1976), PRC communist poet, hero in the war with Japan, died after long persecution during Cultural Revolution—Nara prefecture in central Japan—Heian Jingū or Heian Shrine, in Kyōto, Japan—Sasebo, city and naval port in Nagasaki prefecture, Kyūshū, Japan—Japan (used in Taiwan during Japanese colonization)—north China navy (esp. the ill-fated Chinese navy in the 1895 war with Japan)—ODA Nobunaga (1534-1582), Japanese shogun (warlord), played an important role in unifying Japan—Mizumata City in Kumamoprefecture, Kyūshū, Japan—Jianzhen or Ganjin (688-763), Tang dynastic Buddhist monk, who crossed Japan after several unsuccessful attempts, influential in Japanese Buddhism—Make the country wealthy and the military powerful, slogan of modernizers in Qing China and Meiji Japan (Japanese pronunciation: Fukoku kyōhei)—han, a province under a feudal overlord in premodern Japan—Dutch studies (study of Europe and the world in premodern Japan)—Niigata prefecture in northwest Japan—Sendai, city in northeast Japan—Gumma prefecture in northern Japan—National Treasure (officially designated by the state cultural authorities in China, Japan and Korea)—Ministry of Education, Science and Culture (Japan), ceased exist in 2001 when it was merged with another ministry—Takahashi city in Okayama prefecture, Japan—Korean Empire, from fall of Joseon dynasty in 1897 annexation by Japan in 1910—Lugou Bridge or Marco Polo Bridge in southwest of Beijing, the scene of the incident of 7th July 1937 that sparked WW2 between Japan and China— |