Fukuzawa Yukichi was a Japanese author, educator, and publisher who was probably the most influential man outside government service in the Japan of the Meiji Restoration (1868), following the overthrow of the Tokugawa shogunate. He led the struggle to i
Many of the country’s most iconic legends come from the Tohoku region, where history is riddled with natural disasters, famine, and isolation.
根据前句The word "emoji" comes from Japanese,literally meaning "picture character"表示" '表情符号' 一词来自日语,字面意思是 '图片字符' ",可知表示"表情符号是代表思想、情感或感情的小符号"的选项F符合前后解释emoji概念的语境,故选F。(2)E.细节理解题。根据后句People like them because they add ...
1. 上文The word "emoji" comes from Japanese, literally meaning "picture character".(emoji一词来自日语,字面意思是“图片字符”。)说明emoji的来源以及含义,分析选项,F项:表情符号是一种代表思想、情绪或感觉的小符号。进一步阐述了emoji的含义,符合语境。故选F。2. 下文With a smiling or sad face......
or intelligible only to persons sharing a common background; the phrase “some smoke rose noisily” (kemuri tachisawagite), for example, was all readers of the late 17th century needed to realize that an author was referring to the Great Fire of 1682 that ravaged the shogunal capital of Ed...
highly abrupt and impolite form used mainly by men in situations of great familiarity and/or clearly defined power relationships. Public use of the brusque imperative is appropriate only in very specific circumstances, e.g., at the scene of a fire, firemen dispense with politeness to yell退け!
When they were four years old, Towa and Setsuna were playing together in a forest until they get caught in a fire and while trying to rescue her sister, Towa is dragged away by a portal which leaves her stranded in the present. She is found by her half-uncle-in-law and Kagome's you...
they include outdoor gas barbeques in the category, whereas in most Southern hemisphere countries a barbeque requires a wood fire. shrug 6 ( +6 / -0 ) Simon Phillips Apr. 5, 2013 09:51 am JST The worst part is when you get used to the Engrish and you end...
Toconoco is a made-up Japanese word meaning “Kids on the floor”. We are a kid-friendly cafe in East London, serving delicious home-cooked Japanese food.
The banner Shingen carried in his campaigns bore the four characters fu-rin-ka-zan from Sun Tsu’s “The Art of War”, which can be translated as: Be as swift as the wind, as silent as the wood, attack as fiercely as fire, be as composed as the mountain. The book starts shortly ...