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The physical ie: a Japanese House. Ie (家) is a Japanese term which translates directly to household. It can mean either a physical home or refer to a family's lineage. It is popularly used as the "traditional" family structure. The physical definition of an ie consists of an estate that includes a house, rice paddies and vegetable gardens ...
Jewelpet Sunshine (Japanese: ジュエルペット サンシャイン, Hepburn: Juerupetto Sanshain) is the third Jewelpet anime television series created by Sanrio and Sega. It began airing on TV Tokyo between April 9, 2011 and March 31, 2012 on TV Tokyo.
Yasunori Shimura (志村 康徳, Shimura Yasunori, February 20, 1950 – March 29, 2020), known professionally as Ken Shimura (志村 けん, Shimura Ken), was a Japanese comedian. He was born in Higashimurayama, Tokyo. He started his career as an assistant to the comedy band The Drifters, led by Chōsuke Ikariya. In 1974, He joined the group ...
The IEEE traces its founding to 1884 and the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.In 1912, the rival Institute of Radio Engineers was formed. [6] Although the AIEE was initially larger, the IRE attracted more students and was larger by the mid-1950s.
I (い in hiragana or イ in katakana) is one of the Japanese kana each of which represents one mora. い is based on the sōsho style of the kanji character 以, and イ is from the radical (left part) of the kanji character 伊. In the modern Japanese system of sound order, it occupies the second position of the mora chart, between あ and う.
Rie Suegara (末柄 里恵), Japanese voice actress; Rie Takada (高田 りえ), a Japanese manga artist; Rie Takahashi (高橋 李依, born 1994), Japanese voice actress and singer; Rie Tanaka (田中 理恵, born 1979), a Japanese singer and voice actress; Rie Terazono (寺園 理恵), a Japanese field hockey goalkeeper
Ichi-go ichi-e (Japanese: 一 期 一 会, pronounced [it͡ɕi.ɡo it͡ɕi.e], lit. "one time, one meeting") is a Japanese four-character idiom that describes a cultural concept of treasuring the unrepeatable nature of a moment. The term has been roughly translated as "for this time only", and "once in a lifetime".
In Japanese writing, the kana え and エ (romanised e) occupy the fourth place, between う and お, in the modern Gojūon (五十音) system of collating kana. In the Iroha, they occupy the 34th, between こ and て. In the table at right (ordered by columns, from right to left), え lies in the first column (あ行, "column A") and the ...