japanprobe.com
Photos: Super cheap hotel in Osaka – 800 yen ($8) per night | Japan Probe
http://www.japanprobe.com/2014/02/22/photos-super-cheap-hotel-in-osaka-800-yen-8-per-night
Photos: Super cheap hotel in Osaka – 800 yen ($8) per night. Profiles of the Day. More at Japan Probe Friends. A Japanese 2channel user recently posted. Some photo highlighting his experience staying at Osaka’s Hotel Diamond, which offers some of the cheapest rates in Japan. The receipt, stamped by a hotel staff person, shows that it did indeed cost a mere 800 yen for a single night’s stay. The photos in this post don’t look so bad, but some guests have had bad experiences with the hotel in questio...
japanprobe.com
Discussion Policy | Japan Probe
http://www.japanprobe.com/commentsdiscussion-policy
Profiles of the Day. More at Japan Probe Friends. Our comments policy is pretty simple:. No racist comments or racial slurs. [That includes: Jap. 毛唐, etc.]. No personal attacks on other posters in the comment threads. If you disagree with somebody, go after their argument instead of attacking the person who wrote it. No use of generic handles like “Anon” / “Anonymous” / “gaijin” / “Japanese person”. No comments that are totally off topic. No use of multiple names for the same user. [ Sockpuppetry. Incred...
brandonintokyo.wordpress.com
Sayounara Nihon! | Brandon In Tokyo
https://brandonintokyo.wordpress.com/2009/08/01/sayounara-nihon!
Last day in Nihon up early soaking it all in. Okaasan just left for work (she’s very busy today! And I’m up waiting around for my other host brother to leave so I can say my final goodbyes (he’s going on a day trip to Kamakura (done that! I’ll be taking the Narita Express. From Shinjuku directly to the airport and I’ll be leaving tonight around 7 PM and arriving in Canada today at 11:45 am, half a day before I technically left 😀. I’ve never really had to deal with jet lag, so we’ll see how this goes.
brandonintokyo.wordpress.com
May | 2009 | Brandon In Tokyo
https://brandonintokyo.wordpress.com/2009/05
Archive for May, 2009. Bull; May 31, 2009 • Leave a Comment. Star Trek – スタートレツク. Bull; May 29, 2009 • 4 Comments. One of the best meals of my life… お母さんの焼肉とビール. Bull; May 29, 2009 • 1 Comment. Why I love swim team. Bull; May 24, 2009 • 1 Comment. Ldquo;I got snacks on snacks”. Bull; May 24, 2009 • Leave a Comment. VID UPDATE : In the Sun. Bull; May 22, 2009 • 4 Comments. I 3 the 上智大学 SWIM TEAM. :). Bull; May 18, 2009 • Leave a Comment. Laquo; Previous Entries. An Englishman in Osaka. Ji Oh in Tokyo.
japanprobe.com
New Year’s Shrine Visitors = Vile Sinners Who Must Repent | Japan Probe
http://www.japanprobe.com/2011/01/02/new-years-shrine-visitors-vile-sinners-who-must-repent
New Year’s Shrine Visitors = Vile Sinners Who Must Repent. Profiles of the Day. More at Japan Probe Friends. Ju2tin and moufestaphio have made some interesting posts. About groups of Christians who gather outside major shrines in Tokyo and warn people making New Year’s shrine visits about the hellfire that awaits them if they do not accept Jesus Christ as their savior:. I got a few pics I’ll post in a minute.”. 8211; Gadgetry from Japan ( Subscribe. 8211; Your portal to Japan ( Subscribe. Oh and I don...
japanprobe.com
About Us | Japan Probe
http://www.japanprobe.com/author-information
Profiles of the Day. More at Japan Probe Friends. We have created this site to act as a blog-based reservoir of information, entertainment, and news on the more interesting aspects of Japan. Some of the material we post will be of our own original creation, and some of it will be submitted by others or linked from other sites on the net. We are not on the payroll of any political organizations, nor do we have some secret political agenda. Since its founding in 2006, Japan Probe has become the most popula...
mylifeasagaijin.blogspot.com
My Life as a Gaijin: Spelling Mistakes
http://mylifeasagaijin.blogspot.com/2008/12/spelling-mistakes.html
My Life as a Gaijin. The kid screamed after rounding the corner of the supermarket aisle and running into me. He quickly turned on his heels and darted off to find his mother. Yes, there was no doubt about it, I was a gaijin, a thing to shock small children and adults alike. Wednesday, December 10, 2008. Today was the last lesson with the students attempting to write funny stories. He was a shy boy. He couldn't say. Elotic words like "sox" and "possy". Posted by Melanie Gray Augustin. Hey Lisa - Thanks!
mylifeasagaijin.blogspot.com
My Life as a Gaijin: The Legend of the Cowfrog
http://mylifeasagaijin.blogspot.com/2008/08/legend-of-cowfrog.html
My Life as a Gaijin. The kid screamed after rounding the corner of the supermarket aisle and running into me. He quickly turned on his heels and darted off to find his mother. Yes, there was no doubt about it, I was a gaijin, a thing to shock small children and adults alike. Monday, August 11, 2008. The Legend of the Cowfrog. Just before the station was a small river. Often at night, I would hear a sound like that of a cow moo- ing. She told me made a sound much like a cow. I imagined it the size of a ca...
mylifeasagaijin.blogspot.com
My Life as a Gaijin: Japanese Ten Month Pregnancies
http://mylifeasagaijin.blogspot.com/2009/01/japanese-ten-month-pregnancies.html
My Life as a Gaijin. The kid screamed after rounding the corner of the supermarket aisle and running into me. He quickly turned on his heels and darted off to find his mother. Yes, there was no doubt about it, I was a gaijin, a thing to shock small children and adults alike. Tuesday, January 06, 2009. Japanese Ten Month Pregnancies. The first time I heard about ten month pregnancies, I was shocked and confused. I was talking to a student, incidentally. The same student that I had the " Cowfrog. I used th...
ojisanjake.blogspot.com
More glimpses of unfamiliar Japan: Tamatsukuriyu Shrine
http://ojisanjake.blogspot.com/2015/07/tamatsukuriyu-shrine.html
More glimpses of unfamiliar Japan. Off the beaten track in Japan:- Nature, Culture, History, Spirit, Art. Saturday, July 18, 2015. The main shrine in Tamatsukuri is the Tamatsukuriyu Shrine. The three main kami are Kushiakarutami, Onamuchi (Okuninushi), and Sukunahikona. The latter two are well known, but this was my first encounter with Kushiakarutami, who was the priest Tamasuri (he who makes the jewels) who enshrined Okuninushi following the ceding of the land to the Yamato, Kuniyuzuri.