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Shin Kusaka (慎), a Japanese actor; Shin Nakamura (中村 伸, born 1974), Japanese footballer; Shin Ōnuma (心), a Japanese animation and theatre director; Shin Saburi (信, 1909–1982), Japanese film actor; Shō Shin (1465–1526), king of the Ryūkyū Kingdom; Shin Takahashi (しん, born 1967), Japanese manga artist; Shin Terai, a ...
When written, To-Shin Do is formed of three kanji: 刀 – to – sword; 心 – shin – heart; 道 – dō – way, path; The literal Japanese to English translation of To-Shin Do is “Sword Spirit Path”. [12] Practitioners of the art use a more developed translation where To = sword, Shin = the focused spirit of intention, and Do = the ...
The New Interconfessional Translation Bible (Japanese: 新共同訳聖書, Hepburn: Shin Kyōdō Yaku Seisho, lit. "New Joint Translation Bible") is a Japanese translation of the Christian Bible, completed in 1987, and is currently the most widely used Japanese Bible, by both Catholics and Protestants.
The Japanese equivalent is shin, as in Shinto. This single Chinese term expresses a range of similar, yet differing, meanings. The first meaning is a generic word for deities which are intimately involved in the affairs of the world, or spirits, such as dead ancestors. [1] Spirits generate entities like rivers, mountains, thunder, and stars.
' State Shinto ') – Japanese translation of the English term State Shinto created in 1945 by the US occupation forces to define the post-Meiji religious system in Japan. Kokoro (心, lit. ' heart ') – The essence of a thing or being. Kokugakuin Daigaku (國學院大學) – Tokyo university that is one of two authorized to train Shinto priests.
The Kenkyūsha New Japanese-English Dictionary 5th Edition with leather back and the iPhone Edition running on an iPhone 5.. First published in 1918, Kenkyusha’s New Japanese-English Dictionary (新和英大辞典, Shin wa-ei daijiten) has long been the largest and most authoritative Japanese-English dictionary.
Shina kyōwakoku was the literal translation of the English "Republic of China" while Chūka minkoku was the Japanese pronunciation of the official Chinese characters of Zhōnghuá mínguó. The Republic of China unofficially pressed Japan to adopt the latter but was rejected.
Shin (band) (Chinese: 信樂團) Shin (singer) (蘇見信), a Taiwanese singer and former lead singer of the band Shin; Shin, the drummer of the German visual kei group Cinema Bizarre; The Shin, a Georgian fusion jazz band; The Shins, an American indie band; Shin (シン), a Japanese rock singer and former vocalist of Vivid