Mais je m'appelle aussi Brian Chandler. I grew up in the house on the right in the photo, in
Painswick, England, and I currently live in
Sano (佐野), at the northern edge of the
Kanto Plain (関東平野, Kantō heiya) in Japan.
I have interests in
Music
Language
Mathematics
The game of go
Mountains, rivers, and canals
Lists that, without any planning, turn out to be triangular
Help:Pipe trick (doesn't seem to work on subdirectories! [[Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Music#Opus.2C work.2C and measure numbers| ]] doesn't give
Manual of Style
The Soviet Union opened the Trans-Siberian route to foreigners in the 60s. As Vladivostok being a naval base, the shipping service to Japan was provided by a new route from Nakhodka, a railway terminal north of Vladivostok, to Yokohama. The service started in 1961. ?he "Ordzhonikidze", used on this route, was replaced by the "Khabarovsk" and the "Baikal" (5,261 gt) of 1964 and then also the "Felix Dzerjinski", operated by the Far East Shipping Co., abbreviated FESCO. During the '80s the service Nakhodka - Yokohama was extended to Shanghai. Generally these motor-ships were built in East Germany. The "Konstantin Chernenko" (9,885 gt), built in Poland and then renamed "Russ", followed in 1987. In 1994, after the end of the Soviet Union, the route changed to Vladivostok - Niigata and Fushiki and the Shanghai service disappeared. The "Russ" was chartered for Baltic Sea services in 1996 and then she returned to the route from Vladivostok to Fushiki, were a train connects only with nearby Takoaka.
ikigai : ref. Doctor House ep.5-18 near end. Woo-defending patient says of
Millerites "Gave them a reason for living [not transcribed]", subtitles 「生き甲斐があるようになった」(not transcribed)
I am quoting this passage directly from "All About Particles" by Naoko Chino:
Note: Wa has several usages, but its basic function is to set off a topic (e.g. of conversation) from the rest of the sentence, which talks about the topic. Technically wa does not indicate case (subject, object, etc.). However, in practical terms, it often (but not always) comes after the subject of the sentence. See also -te wa (#47) and to wa (#17)