释义 |
Examples:G7, the group of 7 industrialized countries: US, Japan, Britain, Germany, France, Italy and Canada (now G8, including Russia)—Tsushima Island, between Japan and South Korea—raccoon of North China, Korea and Japan (Japanese: tanuki)—Hakone, city on the east coast of Japan southwest of Tōkyō—Nihonshoki or Chronicles of Japan (c. 720) book of mythology and history—Tokugawa, the ruling clan of Japan from 1550-1850—Shizuoka prefecture southwest of Tōkyō, Japan—Noda Yoshihiko, Prime Minister of Japan (2 September 2011 ~)—abolish the feudal Han and introduce modern prefectures (refers to reorganization during Meiji Japan)—Itsukujima shrine in Hiroshima prefecture, Japan—Guo Xiaochuan (1919-1976), PRC communist poet, hero in the war with Japan, died after long persecution during Cultural Revolution—Heian Jingū or Heian Shrine, in Kyōto, Japan—Sasebo, city and naval port in Nagasaki prefecture, Kyūshū, Japan—Yamanano Orochi, serpent with eight heads and eight tails from mythological section of Nihon Shoki (Chronicles of Japan)—(Chinese) characters native Korea, Japan, Vietnam etc—Border Region currency, issued by the Communist Border Region governments during the War against Japan and the War of Liberation—ODA Nobunaga (1534-1582), Japanese shogun (warlord), played an important role in unifying Japan—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—Mizumata City in Kumamoprefecture, Kyūshū, Japan—the Marco Polo Bridge Incident of 7th July 1937 that sparked WW2 between Japan and China—Tsushima Strait, between Japan and South Korea—Senkaku Islands (administered by Japan as part of Okinawa prefecture)—Itsukushima island in Hiroshima prefecture, Japan, with a famous shrine—han, a province under a feudal overlord in premodern Japan—Pacific War between Japan and the US, 1941-1945—Fusang, mythical island of ancient literature, often interpreted as Japan—Asakusa, district of Tokyo with an atmosphere of old Japan, famous for the 7th century Buddhist temple, Sensō-ji—Rumphius' slit shell (Entemnotrochus rumphii), found in Japan and Taiwan—moyamoya disease (rare brain disease first diagnosed in Japan)—TOYOTOMI Hideyoshi (1536-1598), Japanese warlord, undisputed ruler of Japan 1590-1598—Satsuma, the name of a former feudal domain in Japan, and of a former province, a battleship, a district, a peninsula etc—Shikoku (one of the four main islands of Japan)—Ministry of Education, Science and Culture (Japan), ceased exist in 2001 when it was merged with another ministry—Korean Empire, from fall of Joseon dynasty in 1897 annexation by Japan in 1910—matsutake (Tricholoma matsutake), edible mushroom considered a great delicacy in Japan— ▸ Wikipedia |