Japanese Glossary
(this are terms which I use with familiarity, but
perhaps more explanation is required)
- anime
- animation, cartoons
- bento
- box lunch or meal, served in compartmentalized container
- cha
- tea (by default, green tea, although many other types are
available, some of which don't employ tea leaves. Green tea
is green because the leaves are steamed, rather than roasted).
Usually preceded with the honorary o- prefix: ocha
- chapatsu
- "tea hair" - many Japanese kids bleach their hair
slightly (some, a lot)
- dotaku
- bronze, bell-shaped objects from antiquity, their usage unknown
- Edo
- what Tokyo was called prior to the Meiji
Restoration 1
- gomi
- rubbish
- hashi
- chopsticks (waribashi are disposable chopsticks)
- kanji
- Chinese characters (the Japanese use a subset, augmented by two
additional sets of their own characters which are phonetic)
- kawaii
- Cute (More
info)
- manji
- backwards swastika, Buddhist temple symbol
- Meiji Era
- 1868 - 1912 (reign of first modern emperor, Matsuhito)
- minshuku
- family-run lodgings, like a B & B or Zimmer Frei.
- noren
- Curtains hanging in front of a shop's entrance,
indicating that it's open for business - they're usually
navy blue with white markings. (Not to be confused with
the paper-thin sheets of dried seaweed called nori.)
- oden
- foods simmered in a soy and kelp stock for several
hours; traditional winter side-dish
- ofuru
- the Japanese bath - no soap allowed! All washing's
done outside, the bath-water's only for soaking.
- omiyage
- souvenirs
- ryokan
- a traditional Japanese
inn 2
- sakura
- cherry blossoms
- Shichifukujin
- the seven deities of good fortune 3
- shinkansen
- super-express "bullet train"
- Shitamachi
- Old town, downtown - the older area of Tokyo, distinct
from the "high town" (the latter is now encircled by the
Yamanote line)
- shoji
- latticed, paper-covered window or sliding
door (fusuma are opaque shoji)
- tanuki
- racoon-dog
- tatami
- woven rice-straw mat used as flooring in traditional
Japanese interiors, corresponding with a single sleeping
space (6 feet by 3 feet)
- torii
- Shinto gate, usually painted the red-orange
color called vermilion - there's (at least)
one at the entrance to every Shinto shrine. A
few of these shrines have so many, walking
through them's like being in a corridor.
- toro
- fatty tuna belly meat
- Ukiyo-e
- wood block prints, "floating world pictures"
- Yamato
- "Land of Great Harmony" - traditional name for Japan
- yukata
- unisex cotton kimono - one of the amenities
supplied at any Japanese hotel, along with the
towels and a disposable toothbrush - every guest
gets one (and at hot springs resorts they even
wear 'em outside). To prevent theft, now they
usually have the hotel's name worked in to
the (traditionally white and navy blue) design.
Notes:
1 Began in 1868, ending the
police state of the Tokugawa shogunate which started
in 1603. On April 6, 1868, the emperor Matsuhito signed
a Charter Oath promising to be guided in his rule
by a deliberative assembly responsive to public
opinion, and the last Tokugawa forces were
defeated July 4, 1868 at the Battle of Ueno. Although
the beginnings of the modern era might be dated from
1853, when Commodore Perry's flotilla sailed into
Edo Bay, "Meiji" is when it became obvious.
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2 Although I'm deeply
satisfied when surrounded by traditional Japanese
furnishings, while "on-site" I actually prefer
the Western-style lodgings available at the
"business hotels"
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3
The seven lucky gods:
- Hotei - a deity of good fortune and happiness, represented by a round face and large belly
- Jurojin - a deity of wisdom and longevity, he has a long white beard and carries a scroll that contains the secret to longevity
- Fukurokuju - a deity providing happiness, riches and longevity (he's the one with the big forehead)
- Benzaiten - a deity of virtue, music, the arts, and eloquence; she plays a biwa (Japanese lute)
- Bishamonten - a brave deity in armor, he carries a miniture spear and a pagoda
- Daikokuten - a kitchen deity, carrying a lucky mallet and a straw rice sack slung over his back
- Ebisu - a deity of fishery and commerce; he holds a sea bream under his arm
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