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The Touhou Project characters Satori Komeiji and her younger sister Koishi Komeiji are both satori, although Koishi cannot read minds.; In Kamen Rider Hibiki, a Makamou has the same name as this yōkai and is introduced as one of the final villains of the last episode of the TV series, albeit it does not feature a monkey.
Satori is often used interchangeably with kenshō. [4] Kenshō refers to the perception of the Buddha-nature or emptiness . While the terms have the same meaning, customarily satori is used to refer to full, deep experience of enlightenment (such as of the Buddha), while kenshō is used to refer to a first experience of enlightenment that can ...
Satori A mountain-dwelling monkey-like creature that can read one's thoughts, hailing from Gifu Prefecture. Sazae-oni A turban snail of great age, typically thirty years, which has gained the ability to turn into a woman. Seiryū The Japanese version of the Chinese Azure Dragon of the East. Sesshō-seki
Justin Baldoni disclosed a photo of handwritten notes allegedly from his meeting with an intimacy coordinator, a meeting he claims in his lawsuit Blake Lively chose to skip.
Satori – mind-reading magical ape or monkey (Japan) Shōjō – anthropomorphic spirit, depicted as furred, somewhat confounded with orangutan (Japan) Shug Monkey – dog/monkey (Britain) Sun Wukong (proper name) – powerful warrior-magician in the form of a monkey who hatched from a stone egg (China)
Jeremy Strong as Roy Cohn and Sebastian Stan as Donald Trump in The Apprentice. (Briarcliff Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collection) (Courtesy Everett Collection)
U.S. Senator Brian Schatz said on Monday he would block Senate votes on President Donald Trump's nominees for diplomatic positions in protest over moves to close the U.S. Agency for International ...
The Japanese cultural meaning of the monkey has diachronically changed. Beginning with 8th-century historical records, monkeys were sacred mediators between gods and humans; around the 13th century, monkeys also became a "scapegoat" metaphor for tricksters and dislikable people. These roles gradually shifted until the 17th century, when the ...