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Okinotorishima (沖ノ鳥島, Okinotori-shima), or Parece Vela, is a coral reef, geologically an atoll, with two rocks enlarged with tetrapod-cement structures. It is administered by Japan with a total shoal area of 8,482 m 2 (2.10 acres) and land area 9.44 m 2 (101.6 sq ft). [1]
This page was last edited on 25 August 2006, at 04:07 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may ...
words by Hiroyuki Itsuki; theme song from the 1978 film Glowing Autumn: Vocal: 1978: 翼: Wings (Tsubasa) for voice and piano: words by the composer Vocal: 1979: さくら さくら: Sakura Sakura: for voice and piano: Japanese folk song Vocal: 1983: 島へ: To the Island (Shima e) for voice and piano: words by Mitsuru Izawa: Vocal: 1985 ...
Geographic name servers: according to the NGIA GNS server, "Okino-tori-shima" is the BGN Standard. Japanese government also uses Okinotorishima. Okinotorishima gets 79 pages while Okinotori gets 17 pages and some of the latter are actually Okinotori-shima or Okinotori Shima.
Iōtorishima (硫黄鳥島, Literal: "sulfur bird island") or Iwo Tori-shima, also called Okinawa Torishima (沖縄鳥島), is a volcanic island part of the Ryūkyū Island chain with the only [1] active volcano in Okinawa Prefecture.
The song was released as her third single in March 2001. Very slowly and steadily, the song started gaining popularity. It was a hit on Okinawan radio, and in May 2002 (over a year since its release) it first charted in the Oricon top 100 singles charts. Natsukawa released an EP of Okinawan cover songs, Minamikaze, in May
No. Title Writer(s) Length; 1. "Shimanchu nu Takara" (島人ぬ宝)Begin: 5:20: 2. "Nami" (波, "Wave")Donto: 5:04: 3. "Soredemo Kurashi wa Tsuzuku kara, Subete o, Ima, Wasureteshimau Tame ni wa, Subete o, Ima, Shitteiru Koto ga Jōken de, Boku ni wa Totemo Muri dakara, Hitotsuzutsu Wasureteiku Tame ni, Aisuru Hitotachi to Te o Tori, Wakeatte, Semete Omoidasanai Yō ni, Kurashi o Tsuzuketeiku ...
The following is the phonology of the Wadomari dialect (part of Eastern Okinoerabu), which is based on Hirayama et al. (1986). [4]As with most Ryukyuan languages to the north of Central Okinawan, stops are described as "plain" C’ and "glottalized" C‘.