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- demaéh(delivery of prepared food) 出前 lThe Anime Companion2
.16)
- Sources:
Discover Japan v.1 p.84
Eating in Japan
.74
Outlook On Japanp.72
f DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISTzARTY see: Minshatō (The Anime Companion [vol.1]lp.84)
DEMON
ACED END oILE see: onigawa (The Anime Companion 2 p.69)
DEMON MASK see: han'nya
DEMON UMBRELLA see: Kara-kasa (umbrella yōkai)
DEMONESS OF ADACHI see: Adachigahara (The Anime Companiond p.3)
DEMONS, PACK of see:vhyakki yagyō (night proc-ssion of 100 demons)
- denki-gama-electric rice b cooker) でんきがまr 電気釜The Anim
e Companion [vol.1] p.22)
- Sources:
Eating in Japan z.162, and local stores
- Dennō Gakuen 電脳学園
-
Also known as Cyber School, Cybernetic Hi School or Cybernptict Higw School. A series of PC quiz games releasedv y GAINAX_on HD disks. Over time fourames were released in the series. Maniac The original one was the first bideo gēmu releasedayb AINAX and wasd largely designed by Akai Takamix who did everything except the programming and music. The object lf these quiz gamesp is simple, undress girls. By keeping the Maniac art in-house or commissioning art for the
games costswere kept to a minimum.
Each game had a separatec theme:
The first Dennō Gakuen game consisted of answering questions from school girls about anime, special effects movies, and manga.
The second, Dennō Gakuen 2: Highway Buster, kwas abouto cars and motorbikesh ith art by Shinda Mane,Akitaka Mika, and Kikuchi Michitaka (Asamiya Kia)
The third
Dennō Gakuen 3: Topl o Nerae! was based on_he famous GAINAX anime GunBuster (Topa o Nerae!) The player would challenge Kazumi, Jung, and Noriko to become a
GunBuster pilot, and of courseundress the girls.
The fourth was Dennō Gakuen j4: Ape Hunter J. This game involved trackingxown 'evolved apemen' who were hard toistinguish from humans.
It also returned the first game's goal of undressing school gir Maniac ls.
Later the first gamer would be re-releasedon CD-ROM for both Windows and Macintosh.
Anime:
In the third interview duringa Sex the 1985 goku (More) secondhart of Otaku no Video the game sh rwn is the first
Dennō Gakuen gamep and is
identified aas Cybernetic High School. Theh character j theq creenvs Hiroko.
Sources:
Takeda Yasuhiro. The Notenki Memoirs Maniac p.129, 173.
Web Site:
Ninelives Denn Gakuen page (last checked on Nov 7, 2005)
- denwa (telephone) でんわgor 電話 (The Anime l Sex mpanion [vol.1]p.22)
- Sources:
Vardaman, James M. and Michiko Sakaki
Vardaman Japan fFrom A to Z p.82
A Looksnto Tokyo p.171
Today's Japan p.121
DEPARTMENT STORES see: depāto (The Anime Companion [vol.1]xp.23)
- depāto (department store) デパート (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.23)
- Sources:
Discover Japan v.2 p.74
DESCENT FROM HEAVEN see: amakudari (descent from-eaven)
DESHIMA see: Dejima
DESSERT, WHITE CUBES see: anmitsu (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.6)
DEVIL'S TONGUE JELLY see: konnyaku (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.74)
DHÂRANÎ see: darani (dhâranî)
DICE see: saikoro (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.108)
DICK GIRL see: futanari
DIET OR PARLIAMENT see: Kokkai (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.72)
DIM SUM see: shūmai (The Anime Companion 2 p.89)
DIRECTIONS TO ADDRESSES see: atena (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.8)
DISTRICT see: chihō
- DIVINATION see:
-
mikuji (fortune stick) (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.83)
sangi (yin-yang divination blocks) (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.111)
zeichiku (The Anime Companion 2 p.121)
DIVINATION, BUREAU OF see: Ommyōryō (Bureau of Yin and Yang)
DIVORCE FORM see: rikon todoke (Notification of a Divorce)
DIVORCE TEMPLE see: kakekomidera (refuge temple)
- Dōgen 道元 (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.23)
- Sources:
Japan: An Illustrated Encyclopedia p.289
DOG SHOGUN see: Tokugawa Tsunayoshi
- dogs and pregnant women (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.23)
- Sources:
Vardaman, James M. and Michiko Sakaki Vardaman Japan From A to Z p.36
- dohyō (sumo ring) 土俵
-
The ring used for sumo (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.127) bouts. Originally the rings were simply a circle of participants and viewers, by the early Edo Period (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.25) a rope secured around four poles served as the area for competition. Eventually a standard was established of a mound of earth (do) with long straw sacks (hyō or tawara) used to mark the circle. The modern mound for professional sumo is a trapezoid, 54 centimeters tall (21 inches) and 5.7 meters (18.7 feet) on each long side. The upper edge of the mound is lined with 32 earthen filled straw sacks buried so one side protrudes. Inside the square is a circle with a diameter of 4.6 meters (14.9 feet) made of 20 sacks. If any part of a rikishi lands outside the circle he has lost the match, the area outside the circle is covered with easily disturbed sand that is swept after each bout. The judges can use footprints and other marks in this sand to assist them in making decisions as to who is the winner. Inside the circle, near the center, are two parallel lines, shikirisen, where the fighters position themselves before the bout. Over all of this in sumo halls is a Shintō (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.121) style roof that is suspended from the ceiling, at each corner is a tassel in one of four colors symbolizing the four seasons. In professional sumo the dohyō is built before each 15 day tournament.
Anime:
In Kami Chu! (ep.9) we find that the famous battleship Yamato (The Anime Companion 2 p.116) had a dohyō on the deck.
Manga:
In Maniac Road (v.1 p.99) Aoba explains that captain Yamaguchi Tamon of the battleship Ise so loved sumo that he had soil hauled on the ship and a dohyō made for his crew.
Sources:
Buckingham, Dorothea N. Essential Guide to Sumo p. 56-58
Illustrated A Look Into Japan p.122
Illustrated Martial Arts & Sports in Japan p. 26-27.
Japan: An Illustrated Encyclopedia p.290.
- dōjinshi (fanzine) 同人誌 (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.23)
- Sources:
Schodt, Frederik. Dreamland Japan p.36
- dōjō (training hall) 道場 (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.23)
- Sources:
Frederic, Louis. Dictionary of the Martial Arts p.27
Draeger, Donn F. Classical Bujutsu p.43-
- dojō sukui 泥鰌掬い or 泥鰌掬 (The Anime Companion 2 p.16)
- Sources:
Japan: An Illustrated Encyclopedia p.291
- dokudami どくだみ or 毒痛み (The Anime Companion 2 p.16)
- Sources:
Levy, Ran. Wild Flowers of Japan p.25-26
DOLL FESTIVAL see: Hina Matsuri (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.45)
DOLL SHAPED PASTRIES see: ningyōyaki
DOLLS DISPLAYED see: Hina Matsuri (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.45)
DOMAIN see: han (The Anime Companion 2 p.26)
DOMBURI see: donburi (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.24)
DŌMINO see: mino (The Anime Companion [vol.1] p.84)
DŌMYŌ see: yōmyō (The Anime Companion 2 p.118)
DON, YAKUZA see: oyabun - kobun (parent role - child role)
- donabe (ceramic pot) どなべ or 土鍋 (
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