• Japan New Party (political party, Japan)

    Hosokawa Morihiro: …of the reform political party Japan New Party (Nihon Shintō) and was the prime minister of Japan in 1993–94.

  • Japan Professional Football League (Japanese soccer league)

    football: Asia and Oceania: Japan’s J-League was launched in 1993, attracting strong public interest and a sprinkling of famous foreign players and coaches (notably from South America). Attendance and revenue declined from 1995, but the league survived and was reorganized into two divisions of 16 and 10 clubs, respectively, by…

  • Japan Railways Group (Japanese organization)

    Japan Railways Group, principal rail network of Japan, consisting of 12 corporations created by the privatization of the government-owned Japanese National Railways (JNR) in 1987. The first railroad in Japan, built by British engineers, opened in 1872, between Tokyo and Yokohama. After some initial

  • Japan Renewal Party (political party, Japan)

    Japan: Political developments: …New Party (JNP) and the Japan Renewal Party. These joined several former opposition parties to form a coalition government with Hosokawa Morihiro, leader of the JNP, as prime minister.

  • Japan Restoration Party (political party, Japan)

    Japan: Political developments: …he and his newly formed Japan Restoration Party (Nippon Ishin no Kai) won a total of 54 seats in the chamber.

  • Japan Series (baseball)

    Japan Series, in baseball, a seven-game play-off between champions of the two professional Japanese baseball leagues, the Central League and the Pacific League. Baseball in Japan was established on a professional basis in 1934, and by 1936 seven professional teams had been organized. A system of

  • Japan Series Results

    The 144-game season of the two Japanese baseball leagues culminates annually in the Japan Series, an additional seven-game play-off between the champions of the Central League and the Pacific League. The table provides a list of Japan Series

  • Japan Skating Federation (Japanese sports organization)

    figure skating: Regional and national: The Japan Skating Federation is charged with developing eligible skaters, hosting coaching programs, and training judges. The country is split into six regions, and senior skaters (age 15 and up) must finish high in the standings to advance to the eastern or western sectionals. They must…

  • Japan Social Democratic Party (political party, Japan)

    Social Democratic Party of Japan (SDPJ), leftist party in Japan that supports an evolving socialized economy and a neutralist foreign policy. Japan’s first socialist parties appeared in the mid-1920s; moderate factions of the country’s labour movement combined to form the Social Mass Party (Shakai

  • Japan Socialist Party (political party, Japan)

    Social Democratic Party of Japan (SDPJ), leftist party in Japan that supports an evolving socialized economy and a neutralist foreign policy. Japan’s first socialist parties appeared in the mid-1920s; moderate factions of the country’s labour movement combined to form the Social Mass Party (Shakai

  • Japan That Can Say ‘No’, The (essay by Ishihara and Morita)

    Ishihara Shintarō: …Nō to ieru Nihon (The Japan That Can Say No). Intended for publication in Japan only, where it became a best seller—although it subsequently appeared in English without Morita’s comments—the essay argued that Japan should wean itself from its reliance on the United States and that Americans were guilty…

  • Japan Trench (submarine trench, Pacific Ocean)

    Japan Trench, deep submarine trench lying east of the Japanese islands, in the floor of the western North Pacific Ocean. It is one of a series of depressions stretching south from the Kuril Trench and the Bonin Trench to the Mariana Trench. The 27,929-foot (8,513-metre) Tuscarora Deep (north) was

  • Japan wood oil tree (plant)

    tung tree: montana), Japan wood oil tree (A. cordata), and lumbang tree (A. trisperma), are decorative and are planted as shade trees or as sources of tung oil in the subtropical and tropical areas of many countries, including the American Deep South, where they grow rapidly under favourable…

  • Japan’s First Modern Novel: Ukigumo of Futabatei Shimei (novel by Futabatei Shimei)

    Ukigumo, novel by Futabatei Shimei, published in 1887–89. It was published in three parts, at first under the name of the author’s more-famous friend, Tsubouchi Shōyō. It was published in English as Japan’s First Modern Novel: Ukigumo of Futabatei Shimei. Ukigumo was one of the first attempts to

  • Japan, Bank of (bank, Japan)

    Japan: Banking: The Bank of Japan, established in 1882, is the sole bank that issues the yen; it also plays an important role in determining and enforcing the government’s economic and financial policies. Until the late 1990s the bank was under the indirect control of the Ministry of…

  • Japan, economy of

    The Japanese economy is the fourth-largest in the world, as measured by gross domestic product (GDP). Japan has a market economy that grew extraordinarily quickly for several decades after World War II. During the 1990s, however, Japan’s economy entered a decades-long period of stagnation, with its

  • Japan, Empire of (historic state)

    Empire of Japan, historical Japanese empire founded on January 3, 1868, when supporters of the emperor Meiji overthrew Yoshinobu, the last Tokugawa shogun. Power would remain nominally vested in the imperial house until the defeat of Japan in World War II and the enactment of Japan’s postwar

  • Japan, flag of

    national flag consisting of a white field bearing a central red disk (a stylized sun). The flag has a width-to-length ratio of 2 to 3.According to tradition, the sun goddess Amaterasu founded Japan in the 7th century bc and was an ancestor of the first of its emperors, Jimmu. Even today the emperor

  • Japan, history of

    Japan: Ancient Japan to 1185: It is not known when humans first settled on the Japanese archipelago. It was long believed that there was no Paleolithic occupation in Japan, but since World War II thousands of sites have been unearthed throughout the country,…

  • Japan, occupation of (Japanese history [1945–1952])

    occupation of Japan, (1945–52) military occupation of Japan by the Allied Powers after its defeat in World War II. Theoretically an international occupation, in fact it was carried out almost entirely by U.S. forces under Gen. Douglas MacArthur. During the occupation period, Japanese soldiers and

  • Japan, Sea of (sea, Pacific Ocean)

    Sea of Japan, marginal sea of the western Pacific Ocean. It is bounded by Japan and Sakhalin Island to the east and by Russia and Korea on the Asian mainland to the west. Its area is 377,600 square miles (978,000 square km). It has a mean depth of 5,748 feet (1,752 metres) and a maximum depth of

  • Japan, Supreme Court of (Japanese government)

    Supreme Court of Japan, the highest court in Japan, a court of last resort with powers of judicial review and the responsibility for judicial administration and legal training. The court was created in 1947 during the U.S. occupation and is modelled to some extent after the U.S. Supreme Court. As

  • Japanese (people)

    Japan: Ethnic groups: The Japanese people constitute the overwhelming majority of the population. They are ethnically closely akin to the other peoples of eastern Asia. During the Edo (Tokugawa) period (1603–1867), there was a social division of the populace into four classes—warrior, farmer, craftsman, and merchant—with a peer class…

  • Japanese allspice (plant)

    allspice: Other plants known as allspice: Other allspices include the Japanese allspice (Chimonanthus praecox), native to eastern Asia and planted as an ornamental in England and the United States, and the wild allspice, or spicebush (Lindera benzoin), a shrub of eastern North America with aromatic berries reputed to have been used as a substitute for…

  • Japanese Alps (mountains, Japan)

    Japanese Alps, mountains, central Honshu, Japan. The term Japanese Alps was first applied to the Hida Range in the late 19th century but now also includes the Kiso and Akaishi ranges to the south. The ranges are a popular skiing and mountain-climbing area. The Hida Range is included within

  • Japanese American (people)

    United States: Asian Americans: …the transcontinental railroad), and the Japanese were long victims of racial discrimination. In 1924 the law barred further entries; those already in the United States had been ineligible for citizenship since the previous year. In 1942 thousands of Japanese, many born in the United States and therefore American citizens, were…

  • Japanese American internment (United States history)

    Japanese American internment, the forced relocation by the U.S. government of thousands of Japanese Americans to detention camps during World War II. That action was the culmination of the federal government’s long history of racist and discriminatory treatment of Asian immigrants and their

  • Japanese American internment in pictures

    On February 19, 1942, U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, giving the U.S. military the authority to exclude any persons from designated areas. Although the word Japanese did not appear in the order, it was clear that Japanese Americans were the focus of the initiative. On

  • Japanese anemone (plant)

    anemone: Other species, such as the Japanese anemone (A. hupehensis, or A. japonica), are favourite border plants for autumn flowering. Some species whose fruits bear a long plumose structure are placed in a separate section, Pulsatilla, often given the rank of genus. Anemones are distributed throughout the world but occur most…

  • Japanese aralia (plant species)

    fatsia, (Fatsia japonica), evergreen shrub or small tree, in the ginseng family (Araliaceae), native to Japan but widely grown indoors for its striking foliage and easy care. In nature it can attain a height to 5 metres (16 feet); the glossy, dark-green leaves, roughly star-shaped, with 7 to 9

  • Japanese architecture

    Japanese architecture, the built structures of Japan and their context. A pervasive characteristic of Japanese architecture—and, indeed, of all the visual arts of Japan—is an understanding of the natural world as a source of spiritual insight and an instructive mirror of human emotion. An

  • Japanese art (visual arts)

    Japanese art, the painting, calligraphy, architecture, pottery, sculpture, bronzes, jade carving, and other fine or decorative visual arts produced in Japan over the centuries. The study of Japanese art has frequently been complicated by the definitions and expectations established in the late 19th

  • Japanese badger (mammal)

    badger: …badger (Meles leucurus) and the Japanese badger (Meles anakuma).

  • Japanese barberry (plant)

    barberry: Japanese barberry (B. thunbergii) often is cultivated as a hedge or ornamental shrub for its scarlet fall foliage and bright-red, long-lasting berries. Several varieties with purple or yellow foliage, spinelessness, or dwarf habit are useful in the landscape. Another widely planted species is wintergreen barberry…

  • Japanese baseball leagues (baseball, Japan)

    Japanese baseball leagues, professional baseball leagues in Japan. Baseball was introduced to Japan in the 1870s by teachers from the United States, and, by the end of the century, it had become a national sport. The first professional leagues were organized in 1936, but the current league

  • Japanese beech (tree)

    beech: Major species: The Japanese, or Siebold’s, beech (F. crenata) is grown as an ornamental in the Western Hemisphere. The Mexican beech, or haya (F. mexicana), a timber tree often 40 metres (130 feet) tall, has wedge-shaped leaves. The Oriental beech (F. orientalis), a pyramidal Eurasian tree about 30 metres (100…

  • Japanese beetle (insect)

    Japanese beetle, (species Popillia japonica), an insect that is a major pest and belongs to the subfamily Rutelinae (family Scarabaeidae, order Coleoptera). It was accidentally introduced into the United States from Japan about 1916, probably as larvae in the soil around imported plants. Japanese

  • Japanese blood grass (plant)

    cogon grass, (Imperata cylindrica), species of perennial grass in the family Poaceae, native to temperate and tropical regions of the Old World. Cogon grass is a serious weed in cultivated areas of South Africa and Australia and is considered an invasive species in many areas outside its native

  • Japanese blue beech (tree, Fagus japonica)

    beech: Major species: …(65 feet) tall, and the Japanese blue beech (F. japonica), up to 24 metres (79 feet) tall, divide at the base into several stems. The Japanese, or Siebold’s, beech (F. crenata) is grown as an ornamental in the Western Hemisphere. The Mexican beech, or haya (F. mexicana), a timber tree…

  • Japanese box (plant species)

    boxwood: The Japanese boxwood (B. microphylla) and its varieties provide a wide range of ornamental shrubs.

  • Japanese boxwood (plant species)

    boxwood: The Japanese boxwood (B. microphylla) and its varieties provide a wide range of ornamental shrubs.

  • Japanese by Spring (novel by Reed)

    Ishmael Reed: …and The Terrible Fours (2021), Japanese by Spring (1993), Juice! (2011), and Conjugating Hindi (2018). He also published numerous volumes of poetry, notably Conjure (1972), which was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize; Chattanooga (1973); A Secretary to the Spirits (1978); New and Collected Poems, 1964–2006 (2006), which won the…

  • Japanese calligraphy

    Japanese calligraphy, the fine art of writing as it has been practiced in Japan throughout the ages. The art of calligraphy has long been highly esteemed in Japan. There is no definite record of when the Japanese began to use Chinese words—called kanji in Japanese, but it is known that a Korean

  • Japanese cedar (tree)

    Japanese cedar, (Cryptomeria japonica), a coniferous evergreen timber tree and only species of the genus Cryptomeria of the family Cupressaceae (sometimes classified in the so-called deciduous cypress family Taxodiaceae), native to eastern Asia. The tree may attain 45 metres (150 feet) or more in

  • Japanese chess (game)

    shogi, Japanese form of chess, the history of which is obscure. Traditionally it is thought to have originated in India and to have been transmitted to Japan via China and Korea. Shogi, like Western chess and Chinese chess, is played by two persons on a board with pieces of varying powers, and the

  • Japanese chestnut (plant)

    chestnut blight: mollissima) and Japanese (C. crenata) chestnuts are resistant. Crosses between American and Asian species have produced varieties with excellent nuts, but timber quality is closely linked with blight susceptibility. In the 1970s a native strain of chestnut blight was identified in North America. Experiments indicated that the…

  • Japanese Chin (breed of dog)

    Japanese spaniel, breed of toy dog that originated in China and was introduced to Japan, where it was kept by royalty. The breed became known in the West when Commodore Matthew Perry returned from Japan in 1853 with several dogs that had been presented to him. The Japanese spaniel is a compact,

  • Japanese Civil Code (Japanese law)

    Japanese Civil Code, body of private law adopted in 1896 that, with post-World War II modifications, remains in effect in present-day Japan. The code was the result of various movements for modernization following the Meiji Restoration of 1868. A legal code was required that would fill the needs of

  • Japanese Combined Fleet (Japanese military)

    World War II: The central Pacific: …still resisting on Saipan, the Japanese Combined Fleet, under Admiral Ozawa Jisaburō, was approaching from Philippine and East Indian anchorages, in accordance with “Operation A,” to challenge the U.S. 5th Fleet, under Admiral Raymond Spruance. Ozawa, with only nine aircraft carriers against 15 for the United States, was obviously inferior…

  • Japanese Communist Party (political party, Japan)

    Japanese Communist Party (JCP), leftist Japanese political party founded in 1922. Initially, the party was outlawed, and it operated clandestinely until the post-World War II Allied occupation command restored freedom of political association in Japan; it was established legally in October 1945. In

  • Japanese Confederation of Labour (labor organization, Japan)

    Dōmei, Japan’s second largest labour union federation until it disbanded in 1987. Dōmei was formed in 1964 by a merger of three politically moderate federations that opposed the leftist stance of the larger and more militant union Sōhyō. Unlike the majority of Sōhyō members, who were public

  • Japanese cork tree (plant)

    cork tree: …or Japanese, cork tree (Phellodendron amurense) is useful as a lawn and shade tree and is tolerant of a wide range of growing conditions.

  • Japanese cormorant (bird)

    cormorant: It and the slightly smaller Japanese cormorant, P. capillatus, are the species trained for fishing. The most important guano producers are the Peruvian cormorant, or guanay, P. bougainvillii, and the Cape cormorant, P. capensis, of coastal southern Africa.

  • Japanese crab (crustacean)

    king crab, (Paralithodes camtschaticus), marine crustacean of the order Decapoda, class Malacostraca. This edible crab is found in the shallow waters off Japan, along the coast of Alaska, and in the Bering Sea. The king crab is one of the largest crabs, weighing 5 kg (11 pounds) or more. Its size

  • Japanese crabapple (tree)

    crabapple: Major species: sieboldii), and Japanese flowering crabapple (M. floribunda). Among notable American species are the garland, or sweet crab (M. coronaria), Oregon crabapple (M. fusca), prairie crabapple (M. ioensis), and southern crabapple (M. angustifolia).

  • Japanese dormouse (rodent)

    dormouse: …of the smallest is the Japanese dormouse of southern Japan (Glirulus japonicus), weighing up to 40 grams and having a body that measures less than 8 cm long and a tail of up to 6 cm. Dormice are small to medium-sized and have large eyes, rounded ears, short legs and…

  • Japanese encephalitis (disease)

    encephalitis: Epidemics of encephalitis: …most common epidemic forms is Japanese encephalitis, which is caused by a mosquito-borne virus and results in acute illness. Japanese encephalitis is found primarily in Asia. Other viral forms of encephalitis, such as St. Louis encephalitis and La Crosse encephalitis, cause sporadic disease in some areas of the United States.…

  • Japanese encephalitis virus (pathogen)

    encephalitis: Epidemics of encephalitis: …is caused by a mosquito-borne virus and results in acute illness. Japanese encephalitis is found primarily in Asia. Other viral forms of encephalitis, such as St. Louis encephalitis and La Crosse encephalitis, cause sporadic disease in some areas of the United States. Strains of Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE), Western equine…

  • Japanese era name (Japanese history)

    Reiwa period: …is enlisted to create a gengō, which is not revealed until the death of an emperor marks the close of the previous era. In December 2017, however, Akihito formally declared his intention to abdicate on April 30, 2019, at which time the Heisei period would come to a end. Because…

  • Japanese evergreen oak (plant)

    oak: Major species and uses: dentata), Japanese evergreen oak (Q. acuta), and sawtooth oak (Q. acutissima). The English oak (Q. robur), a timber tree native to Eurasia and northern Africa, is cultivated in other areas of the world as an ornamental.

  • Japanese Federation of Labour (trade union)

    Suzuki Bunji: …however, he had formed the Japanese Federation of Labour (Nippon Rōdō Sōdōmei); management then attempted to create a counter-organization, the Harmonization Society (Kyōchōkai). But in 1921 Suzuki’s group scored its first big success: 30,000 dock workers at Kōbe went on strike for several months. As a result, the whole labour…

  • Japanese flowering crab (tree)

    crabapple: Major species: sieboldii), and Japanese flowering crabapple (M. floribunda). Among notable American species are the garland, or sweet crab (M. coronaria), Oregon crabapple (M. fusca), prairie crabapple (M. ioensis), and southern crabapple (M. angustifolia).

  • Japanese Footbridge, The (painting by Claude Monet)

    The Japanese Footbridge, oil-on-canvas painting by Claude Monet of the Japanese-style footbridge that was the focal point of his garden at Giverny, France. The structure was one of his favorite subjects, and he painted it over and over again, catching it in different moods and lights. Unlike the

  • Japanese garden

    Japanese garden, in landscape design, a type of garden whose major design aesthetic is a simple, minimalist natural setting designed to inspire reflection and meditation. The art of garden making was probably imported into Japan from China or Korea. Records show that the imperial palaces had

  • Japanese giant hornet (insect)

    northern giant hornet, (Vespa mandarinia), species of social hornet (order Hymenoptera), the largest known wasp species in the world. Native to subtropical and temperate mountainous regions of Asia, including northern India, the Korean peninsula, and Japan, the northern giant hornet was introduced

  • Japanese giant salamander (amphibian)

    salamander: 9 feet) in length—and the Japanese giant salamander (A. japonicus), which can grow up to 1.7 metres (5.6 feet) in length.

  • Japanese Gypsy (people)

    Sanka, outcaste group of people in Japan. The Sanka are sometimes called the Japanese Gypsies, wandering in small bands through the mountainous regions of Honshu. They are not distinguishable in either physical type or language from the rest of the Japanese. Little is known of their history.

  • Japanese hemlock (plant)

    hemlock: sieboldii) and the Japanese hemlock (T. diversifolia), both native to Japan, are grown as ornamentals in North America and Europe.

  • Japanese holly (plant)

    holly: Major species: Japanese holly (I. crenata), an East Asian shrub growing to 6 metres (20 feet), has small evergreen leaves and black berries.

  • Japanese honeysuckle (plant)

    honeysuckle: Major species: The Japanese honeysuckle (L. japonica) of eastern Asia has become an invasive species in many areas by growing over other plants and shutting out light. It has fragrant yellowish white flowers and black berries. Trumpet honeysuckle (L. sempervirens) has oval, sometimes joined leaves and climbs high…

  • Japanese hop (plant)

    hop: The Japanese hop (H. japonicus) is a quick-growing annual species used as a screening vine.

  • Japanese hop-hornbeam (plant)

    hop-hornbeam: Major species: …hop-hornbeam (Ostrya carpinifolia) and the Japanese hop-hornbeam (O. japonica) may reach 21 metres (70 feet); the other species are much smaller. The eastern, or American, hop-hornbeam (O. virginiana) is known as ironwood for its hard heavy wood, used locally for fence posts and small articles such as tool handles.

  • Japanese hornbeam (plant)

    hornbeam: Major species: In the Japanese hornbeam (C. japonica), the downy leaves are reddish brown when unfolding; the smaller Korean hornbeam (C. eximia), usually 9 metres (30 feet) tall, has egg-shaped slender-pointed downy leaves.

  • Japanese horse chestnut (plant)

    horse chestnut: Japanese horse chestnut (A. turbinata) is as tall as the European species but is distinctive for its remarkably large leaves, up to 60 cm (2 feet) across. The Indian horse chestnut (A. indica), with slender, pointed leaflets, has attractive feathery flower spikes with a bottlebrush…

  • Japanese horseradish (plant)

    wasabi, (Eutrema japonicum), plant of the mustard family (Brassicaceae) and a pungent paste made of its ground rhizomes. The plant is native to Japan, South Korea, and Sakhalin, Russia, and its cultivation is limited because of its specific growing requirements. Given the high price and limited

  • Japanese horseshoe crab (chelicerate)

    horseshoe crab: Natural history: …or tri-spine, horseshoe crab (Tachypleus tridentatus), the coastal horseshoe crab (T. gigas), and the mangrove horseshoe crab (Carcinoscorpius rotundicauda)—are found along Asia from Japan to India and closely resemble Limulus in both structure and habits. The animals are most abundant in estuarine waters, where they feed on algae,

  • Japanese House, The (book by Yoshida Tetsuro)

    Yoshida Tetsurō: …urging, he wrote a book, The Japanese House (1935), explaining Japanese architecture to the West. Two other books, one on Japanese architecture and the other on the Japanese garden, were published in 1952 and 1957, respectively. Yoshida’s interest in Western architecture is reflected in his own works, such as the…

  • Japanese ibis (bird)

    ciconiiform: Distribution, habitat, and abundance: At the other extreme, the Japanese ibis (Nipponia nippon) is on the verge of extinction, only one small colony being known. Several other ibis species are rare and are declining in population.

  • Japanese Imperial line (Japanese history)

    uji: …century, its chief created the Japanese imperial line, which is said to be descended from Amaterasu, the sun goddess and deity of the Yamato. Imperial rule over the autonomous uji remained weak until the adoption of centralized government in the mid-7th century.

  • Japanese iris (plant)

    Iridaceae: Major genera and species: The water-loving Japanese iris (Iris ensata), frequently featured in Japanese watercolours. The yellow, or water, flag (I. pseudacorus) is a swamp plant native to Eurasia and North Africa; the blue flag (I. versicolor) occupies similar habitats in North America. Blackberry lily (I. domestica, formerly Belamcanda chinensis) is

  • Japanese ivy (plant)

    Boston ivy, (Parthenocissus tricuspidata), clinging woody vine of the grape family (Vitaceae). Native to eastern Asia, the plant has been introduced into other regions, particularly as a climbing ornamental on stone and brick facades. Boston ivy grows on many old college and university buildings in

  • Japanese knotweed (plant)

    Japanese knotweed, (Fallopia japonica), herbaceous perennial plant of the buckwheat family (Polygonaceae) native to China, Korea, and Japan. Persistent and aggressive, Japanese knotweed is a noxious weed in many areas outside its native range and ranks among the world’s worst invasive species.

  • Japanese language

    Japanese language, a language isolate (i.e., a language unrelated to any other language) and one of the world’s major languages, with more than 127 million speakers in the early 21st century. It is primarily spoken throughout the Japanese archipelago; there are also some 1.5 million Japanese

  • Japanese lantern (plant, Physalis species)

    ground cherry: Chinese lantern (P. alkekengi) is grown as an ornamental.

  • Japanese larch (tree)

    larch: …grown as ornamentals, especially the Japanese larch (L. leptolepis) and L. decidua ‘Pendula,’ a cultivar of the European larch. Larch wood is coarse-grained, strong, hard, and heavy; it is used in ship construction and for telephone poles, mine timbers, and railroad ties.

  • Japanese laurel (plant)

    Garryales: japonica (Japanese laurel) is an important ornamental shrub grown for its glossy green foliage, especially the showy yellow-spotted cultivar “Variegata.”

  • Japanese law

    Japanese law, the law as it has developed in Japan as a consequence of a meld of two cultural and legal traditions, one indigenous Japanese, the other Western. Before Japan’s isolation from the West was ended in the mid-19th century, Japanese law developed independently of Western influences.

  • Japanese lawn grass (plant)

    zoysiagrass: Japanese, or Korean, lawngrass (Z. japonica), Manila grass (Z. matrella), and Mascarene grass (Z. tenuifolia) were introduced into North America as turf and lawn grasses and tolerate a variety of growing conditions. The leaves are fine-bladed in both the Manila and Mascarene grasses.

  • Japanese literature

    Japanese literature, the body of written works produced by Japanese authors in Japanese or, in its earliest beginnings, at a time when Japan had no written language, in the Chinese classical language. Both in quantity and quality, Japanese literature ranks as one of the major literatures of the

  • Japanese Lover, The (novel by Allende)

    Isabel Allende: …include El amante japonés (2015; The Japanese Lover), which traces a decades-long love affair between a Polish immigrant and a Japanese American man, and Más allá del invierno (2017; In the Midst of Winter), about the friendships that form after a car accident in Brooklyn, New York, during a blizzard.…

  • Japanese macaque (primate)

    primate: Distribution and abundance: …most remarkable, however, is the Japanese macaque (M. fuscata), which in the north of Honshu lives in mountains that are snow-covered for eight months of the year; some populations have learned to make life more tolerable for themselves by spending most of the day in the hot springs that bubble…

  • Japanese maple (plant)

    maple: The Japanese maple (A. palmatum), developed over centuries of breeding, provides numerous attractive cultivated varieties with varying leaf shapes and colours, many useful in small gardens. The vine maple (A. circinatum), of wide-spreading, shrubby habit, has purple and white spring flowers and brilliant fall foliage. The…

  • Japanese medlar (tree and fruit)

    loquat, (Eriobotrya japonica), subtropical tree of the rose family (Rosaceae) grown for its evergreen foliage and edible fruit. The loquat is native to central eastern China. It was introduced to Japan more than 1,000 years ago, where it was developed horticulturally and is still highly valued.

  • Japanese mink (mammal)

    kolinsky, any of several species of Asian weasels. See

  • Japanese monarch birch (plant)

    birch: Major species: The Japanese monarch birch (B. maximowicziana) is a valuable timber tree of Japan, especially in the plywood industry. Usually 30 metres (100 feet) high, with flaking gray or orange-gray bark, it has heart-shaped leaves about 15 cm (6 inches) long and is a hardy ornamental. The…

  • Japanese music

    Japanese music, the art concerned with combining vocal or instrumental sounds for beauty of form or emotional expression, specifically as it is carried out in Japan. Korea served as a bridge to Japan for many Chinese musical ideas as well as exerting influence through its own forms of court music.

  • Japanese mythology

    Japanese mythology, body of stories compiled from oral traditions concerning the legends, gods, ceremonies, customs, practices, and historical accounts of the Japanese people. Most of the surviving Japanese myths are recorded in the Kojiki (compiled 712; “Records of Ancient Matters”) and the Nihon

  • Japanese National Railways (Japanese organization)

    Japan Railways Group, principal rail network of Japan, consisting of 12 corporations created by the privatization of the government-owned Japanese National Railways (JNR) in 1987. The first railroad in Japan, built by British engineers, opened in 1872, between Tokyo and Yokohama. After some initial

  • Japanese oak silk moth (insect)

    saturniid moth: Major species: paphia and Japanese oak silk moth (A. yamamai) for tussah silk.

  • Japanese Orthodox Church

    Japanese Orthodox Church, autonomous body of the Eastern Orthodox Church, in canonical relation with the patriarchate of Moscow, which confirms the election of the metropolitan of Tokyo. The Japanese Orthodox Church was created by the efforts of an outstanding missionary, Nikolay Kasatkin