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・ Japanese folklore
・ Japanese folktales
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・ Japanese food supply ship Mamiya
・ Japanese food supply ship Nosaki
・ Japanese foreign policy on Africa
・ Japanese foreign policy on Southeast Asia
・ Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research
・ Japanese Fourteenth Area Army
・ Japanese friendship dolls
・ Japanese Friendship Garden
・ Japanese Friendship Garden (Balboa Park)
・ Japanese Friendship Garden (Kelley Park)
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Japanese garden
・ Japanese Garden, Chandigarh
・ Japanese Garden, Monaco
・ Japanese Garden, Montevideo
・ Japanese Garden, Singapore
・ Japanese Gardens (Hayward, California)
・ Japanese gazelle
・ Japanese general election, 1890
・ Japanese general election, 1892
・ Japanese general election, 1902
・ Japanese general election, 1903
・ Japanese general election, 1904
・ Japanese general election, 1908
・ Japanese general election, 1912
・ Japanese general election, 1915


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

are traditional gardens that create miniature idealized landscapes, often in a highly abstract and stylized way.〔Gunter Nitschke, ''Le jardin japonais'', pg. 9-10.〕 The gardens of the Emperors and nobles were designed for recreation and aesthetic pleasure, while the gardens of Buddhist temples were designed for contemplation and meditation.
Japanese garden styles include ''karesansui'', Japanese rock gardens or Zen gardens, which are meditation gardens where white sand replaces water; roji, simple, rustic gardens with teahouses where the Japanese tea ceremony is conducted; ''kaiyū-shiki-teien'', promenade or stroll gardens, where the visitor follows a path around the garden to see carefully composed landscapes; and ''tsubo-niwa'', small courtyard gardens.
Japanese gardens were developed under the influences of the Chinese gardens,〔(''Encyclopædia Britannica''. Garden and landscape design: Japanese. Accessed: 7 March 2008. )〕 but gradually Japanese garden designers began to develop their own aesthetics, based on Japanese materials and Japanese culture. By the Edo period, the Japanese garden had its own distinct appearance.〔Michel Baridon, ''Les Jardins'', pg. 466-479〕 Since the end of the 19th century, Japanese gardens have also been adapted to Western settings.
==History==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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