Ken Akamatsu (赤松 健, Akamatsu Ken, born July 5, 1968) is a Japanese manga artist from Tokyo. After success with A.I. Love You from 1994–1997, he wrote Love Hina from 1998 to 2001. His longest work to date has been Negima! Magister Negi Magi from 2003 to 2012. His curren...
Some sentences have different structures, and we still don't know what adverbs, adjectives, verbs, nouns, and particles look like exactly. In this article we'll see all of this and some more, so you'll have a starting point even if you know nothing about Japanese. Then, once you figure...
Some of these books are found with the title of "Japanese Fairy Tale Series No. __" in addition to the transliterated title. Currently, my research indicates that starting with 1886 (No. 7) the Japanese Fairy Tale series number was included on the cover along with the title. It also ...
On the FOX Sports broadcast that night, Ken Rosenthal reported that U.S. players noticed similarities between Imanaga and Braves star Max Fried, due in part to the southpaw’s effectiveness against right-handed batters. The BayStars plan to post Imanaga this offseason, and Major League teams ...
During the Kamakura Era, there were sculptors whose name began with "in," like Inkei and In'no. Inkei fashioned a sedentary statue of Priest Ken'nichi Koho (enshrined at Kencho-ji Temple in Kamakura), while In'no is thought to be the creator of a statue of Priest Sho-in Myogen (...
The great thing about starting with the most commonly-used on’yomi is that you’re probably already familiar with a lot of words that use it (the downside of course is that there are several alternate meanings expressed by the one sound). Any beginning Japanese learner should be pretty fami...
From that point onward, he devoted himself to celadon, showing activity such as receiving prizes, starting with the Encouragement Award in the Japan Traditional Kogei Exhibition in 1977, then the Prime Minister Award in the First Western Japan Ceramic Exhibition in 1981, the Japan Ceramics Society...
Baseball Saved Us (1993) by Ken Mochizuki. Illustrated by Dom Lee. New York: Lee & Low. The story focuses on a Japanese American boy in an internment camp. His father and others made baseball fields in the camp for their children, so they could practice baseball. After the Japanese ...
This simple recognition of "the way things are" is the fundamental starting point of Buddhism. In Chapter 2, again using "to go" as his example, Master Någårjuna explains the difference between the con- ceived recognition of an act that has been performed: "gone" (gåta); an act ...
We used the variation in parental responses to study neural transcriptomic changes associated with the sensitization procedure itself and with the outcome of the procedure (i.e., presence of parental behaviours). We found differences in gene expression in the hypothalamus and bed nucleus of the ...