Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sando (official) (1876–1941), Qing dynasty and Republic of China official who was the last Qing viceroy of Mongolia Frank Sando (1931–2012), British long-distance runner Other uses
a katsu-sando of Isen, where it was invented. Katsu-sando (Japanese: カツサンド or かつサンド, lit. ' cutlet sandwich ') is a Japanese sandwich which is made from Japanese-style cutlet (mainly tonkatsu) between slices of bread, and there are many variations.
In the Philippines, a sleeveless undershirt is called a sando. In addition to athletic usage, tank tops have traditionally been used as undershirts, especially with suits and dress shirts. They are sometimes worn alone without a dress shirt or top shirt during very warm and/or humid weather.
The sandō at Fushimi Inari Taisha in Kyoto. A sandō (参道, visiting path) in Japanese architecture is the road approaching either a Shinto shrine or a Buddhist temple. [1] Its point of origin is usually straddled in the first case by a Shinto torii, in the second by a Buddhist sanmon, gates which mark the beginning of the shrine's or temple territory.
The word tonkatsu is a combination of the Sino-Japanese word ton (豚) meaning "pig", and katsu (カツ), which is a shortened form of katsuretsu (カツレツ), [1] an old transliteration of the English word "cutlet", [2] [3] which was in turn adopted from the French word côtelette.
Sando (alternately Sanduo, San To, Sadowo; Chinese: 三多; pinyin: Sānduō; Mongolian: Сандо; 1876–1941), courtesy name Liuqiao (Chinese: 六橋), was an official of the Qing dynasty and later the Republic of China who most served as the 62nd and last Qing Amban ("Resident Commissioner") of Outer Mongolia from 1909 to 1911.
The Sando (singular of Sandobele) divination process constitutes one of the most important and common rituals in Senufo culture. Leaders of the community must confer with a Sando diviner before making significant choices or performing sacred ceremonies that affect the community because the action must be communicated to the spirits. People in ...
Sando, as it is known to many local Trinidadians, occupies 19 km 2 and is located in the southwestern part of the island of Trinidad. It is bounded to the north by the Guaracara River , the south by the Oropouche River , the east by the Sir Solomon Hochoy Highway , and the west by the Gulf of Paria .