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Honcho (comics), a fictional character in the Marvel Universe; Honchō Monzui, a Japanese book of Chinese prose and poetry; Honchō Seiki, a Japanese historical text; Honchō Tsugan, a Japanese historical text from 1670
honcho [41] 班長 hanchō, head, chief ikigai 生き甲斐, lit. 'a reason for being' kamikaze [42] 神風, the literal meaning is "divine wind"; used to refer to a Japanese soldier in World War II who crashed an airplane into a target, committing suicide; also refers to the airplane used in the suicide crash. Can also refer to someone ...
(The Japanese reading of this title is Tō Monzui.) The oldest reference to this book is found in an entry in Taiki ( 台記 ) (1150) in which it is referred to as "Monzui". While this shorter title can be found in several other works, it appears in Honchō Shojaku Mokuroku' ( 本朝書籍目録 ) as "Honchō Monzui" which is believed to have ...
Hōchō, Japanese kitchen knives in Tokyo. A Japanese kitchen knife is a type of kitchen knife used for food preparation. These knives come in many different varieties and are often made using traditional Japanese blacksmithing techniques. They can be made from stainless steel, or hagane, which is the same kind of steel used to make Japanese ...
The Japanese language makes use of a system of honorific speech, called keishō (敬称), which includes honorific suffixes and prefixes when talking to, or referring to others in a conversation. Suffixes are often gender-specific at the end of names, while prefixes are attached to the beginning of many nouns.
The current administrative names are Honcho 1-chome to Honcho 6-chome. As of October 2020, the population of this district is 29,587. [ 1 ] The postal code for Honchō is 164-0012.
At TV market Mipcom, Ramin Setoodeh, Variety‘s co-editor-in-chief, spoke on Wednesday about how Donald Trump’s public persona was forged by reality TV series “The Apprentice,” and how it ...
The traditional account for this style, codified by Eitoku's great-grandson Einō (1631–97) in his History of Japanese Painting (Honcho gashi), is that it resulted partly from the exigencies of Eitoku's busy schedule, and that it embodied the martial and political bravura of the warlords, Nobunaga and Hideyoshi.