Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mita is both a Japanese surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include: Surname. Hikaru Mita (born 1981), Japanese football player;
Early Japanese definitions of the mitama, developed later by many thinkers like Motoori Norinaga, maintain it consists of several "spirits", relatively independent one from the other. [3] The most developed is the ichirei shikon ( 一霊四魂 ) , a Shinto theory according to which the spirit ( 霊魂 , reikon ) of both kami and human beings ...
Mita or MITA can refer to: Mita (name) Mit'a or mita, a form of public service in the Inca Empire and later in the Viceroyalty of Peru; Mita, Meguro, Tokyo, a neighborhood in Tokyo, Japan; Mita, Minato, Tokyo, a neighborhood in Tokyo, Japan; Mita Dōri, a road in Tokyo, Japan; Mita Elementary School, a school in Tokyo, Japan
I'm Mita, Your Housekeeper. (家政婦のミタ, Kaseifu no Mita, lit."Mita the Housekeeper") [1] is a 2011 Japanese television drama series. The plot centers on a family that hires Akari Mita (played by actress Nanako Matsushima) as a housekeeper to upkeep their recently deceased mother's house, which has been thrown into disarray.
Mit'a (Quechua pronunciation: [ˈmɪˌtʼa]) [1] [2] was a system mandatory labor service in the Inca Empire, as well as in Spain's empire in the Americas. [3] Its close relative, the regionally mandatory Minka is still in use in Quechua communities today and known as faena in Spanish.
A mitamaya (御霊屋, literally mitama "soul [of the dead]" + ya "house"; also called, otamaya, tamaya, or soreisha 祖霊社, or "Reibyo" 霊廟) [1] is an altar used in Shinto-style ancestor worship, dedicated in the memory of deceased forebears.
Mita, Minato, Tokyo (三田), a district of Minato, Tokyo, Japan Mita Dōri (三田通り), a four lane avenue which forms the border between Mita 2-chōme and Shiba 5-chōme in Minato, Tokyo, Japan; Mita Junior High School (三田中学校), a junior high school in Tokyo; Mita Station (三田駅), a railway station near Mita, in Minato, Tokyo ...
Throughout this period, Mita was known to have met and had close discussions with Shūmei Ōkawa, another translator of the Quran and fellow pan-Asianist. Mita engaged in spy work for the Imperial Japanese Army and wrote of the need to propagandise Muslims in China in order to obtain their support against the Han Chinese forces. [3]