| 释义 |
Examples:agglutinative language (e.g. Turkish and Japanese)—native words (i.e. not derived from Chinese, in Korean and Japanese etc)—ASŌ Tarō (1940-), Japanese entrepreneur and LDP politician, prime minister 2008-2009—raccoon of North China, Korea and Japan (Japanese: tanuki)—called Port Arthur during Russian occupation and Russian-Japanese war of 1905—YUKAWA Hideki (1907-1988), Japanese theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate—Ishihara Jintarō (1932-), Japanese author and politician, governor of Tokyo since 1999—Oe Kenzaburo (1935-) Japanese novelist and 1994 Nobel laureate—Hatoyama, Japanese name and place name—Dragon Ball, Japanese manga and anime series—Fukuzawa Yukichi (1835-1901), prominent Japanese westernizer, liberal educator and founder of Keio University—otaku, a Japanese term for people with obsessive interests such as anime, manga, and video games—Prince KONOE Fumimaro (1891-), Japanese nobleman and militarist politician, prime minister 1937-1939 and 1940-1941—MURAKAMI Haruki (1949-), Japanese novelist and translator—Narita (Japanese surname and place name)—Japanese surname and place name Oukubo—Doraemon, Japanese manga and anime series character—TOMONAGA Shin'ichirō (1906-1979), Japanese physicist, 1965 Nobel prize laureate with Richard Feynman and Julian Schwinger—Fukushima (Japanese surname and place name)—Anglo-Japanese allied army (intervention during Russian revolution and civil war 1917-1922)—MORI Yoshirō (1937-), Japanese rugby player and politician, prime minister 2000-2001, famous for numerous gaffes—Japanese pirates (in 16th and 17th century)—ASŌ Tarō (1940-), Japanese entrepreneur and LDP politician, prime minister from 2008—Make the country wealthy and the military powerful, slogan of modernizers in Qing China and Meiji Japan (Japanese pronunciation: Fukoku kyōhei)—Ricoh, Japanese imaging and electronics company—Iwakura, Japanese name and place-name—the Iwakura mission (Japanese diplomatic and exploratory mission US and Europe of 1871)—Seiko, Japanese watch and electronics company—Pokémon, popular Japanese video game, anime and manga—Crayon Shin-chan (クレヨンしんちゃん), Japanese manga and anime series popular in China—NAKAYAMA Nariaki (1943-), right-wing Japanese cabinet minister and prominent denier of Japanese war crimes— |