雅虎香港 搜尋

搜尋結果

  1. 2017年1月31日 · Toire (トイレ) = toilet. Washiki toire (和式トイレ) = Japanese-style toilet. Yoshiki toire (洋式トイレ) = Western-style toilet. If you want to know the details of using a Japanese-style toilet, have a gander here. They're not very common anymore, but you'll still run into them in public schools (hello, ALTs!) and older train stations.

  2. 2016年4月12日 · 7 Key Resource Sites for English Teachers. Jessica Famularo Updated April 12, 2016. Teaching English. Moving to Japan to teach English is an exciting, but nerve-racking, prospect.

  3. 2019年3月18日 · The standard Japanese toilet seat has an array of functions that might look a little confusing at first. Press the wrong button while trying to flush and you may get a surprise spray of water up your backside. Find out below a breakdown of the different functions in Japanese and their English translations.

  4. 2017年1月26日 · The phrase tenshon ga takai (lit. tension is high) doesn’t mean a super-awkward situation: it actually means being happy, excited, and having fun. Similarly, tenshon ga hikui (tension is low) can be used to describe a gloomy atmosphere or person. 3. Manshon (Mansion) In Japan, a manshon is an apartment building, not a big fancy house.

  5. 2023年12月6日 · The best way to get to this tanada trek is to ride the Hokuhoku train line from Naoetsu Station in Joetsu City, to the west of Tokamachi. Joetsu is set on a vast plain, much of it also covered in rice paddies. To the south are a string of tall volcanic peaks on both sides of the plain. The train begins to ascend as we head east, and the ...

  6. 2023年12月25日 · It’s been 15 years since the drab, ground-floor shopping arcade of a seen-better-days 1970s apartment block near Ebisu Station was given a facelift and converted into a buzzy, retro-themed, evening-only food alley. Rebranded under the name Ebisu Yokocho, it was an instant hit. And so it remains today.

  7. 2017年9月8日 · Brian MacDuckston has devoured more than 1,000 bowls of ramen since arriving in Japan in 2006. Brian MacDuckston has devoured more than 1,000 bowls of ramen since arriving in Japan in June 2006. The noodles formed the fuel for his Ramen Adventures blog starting in October 2008, and in April 2015, Tokyo-based K&B Publishers Inc. released his first book, the appropriately entitled Brian’s ...