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・ Japanese Beech
・ Japanese beetle
・ Japanese Big Four
・ Japanese black porgy
・ Japanese black salamander
・ Japanese blacktail triplefin
・ Japanese Blind Golf Association
・ Japanese block printings
・ Japanese block-printings
・ Japanese blockprintings
・ Japanese blue collar workers
・ Japanese boar
・ Japanese Bobtail
・ Japanese Bolivian
・ Japanese bondage
Japanese books
・ Japanese Boy
・ Japanese Braille
・ Japanese Brazilian
・ Japanese brown frog
・ Japanese Buddhist architecture
・ Japanese Buddhist pantheon
・ Japanese Bug Fights
・ Japanese bullhead shark
・ Japanese Burma Area Army
・ Japanese bush warbler
・ Japanese butterfish
・ Japanese calendar
・ Japanese calligraphy
・ Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre


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Japanese books : ウィキペディア英語版
Japanese books

Books in Japan have a long history, which begins in the late 8th century AD. The majority of books were hand-copied until the Edo period (1603–1867), when woodblock printing became comparatively affordable and widespread. Movable-type printing had been used from the late 16th century, but for various aesthetic and practical reasons woodblock printing and hand-copied remained dominant until much later. Japanese equivalents for "book" include (''hon'') and 書籍 (''shoseki''). The former term indicates only bound books, and does not include scrolls. The latter is used for printed matter only. The most general term is 書物 (''shomotsu''), which means all written or printed matter that has been collected into a single unit, regardless of construction.
== Book composition ==
Japanese books were traditionally made of ''washi'', or Japanese paper. This durable, fibrous paper does not easily yellow or become brittle with age, which has contributed to the remarkable preservation of early books. Western-style wood-pulp paper became dominant beginning in the Meiji period (1868–1912), and ''washi'' is very rarely used for printing in Japan today.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Japanese books」の詳細全文を読む



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