-
The Japanese taboo "4" and "9" because they are pronounced as homonyms for "death" and "bitterness" in Japanese.
-
There are a lot of taboo things in the Japanese, such as color, they are not green, and then do not accept chrysanthemums, do not like lotuses, eating etiquette is also very important, especially in the process of dining, don't make clothes and hair or something, people will think that you are very impolite and unhygienic, and it is best not to burp, people will feel very embarrassed and so on, and there are many such things.
-
What are the taboos in Japanese life? I like to pay attention to KTV, and many people have done this.
-
Don't ask a Japanese girl about her weight, if she does, she will tell you that her parents won't let her, and if you whisper that your parents will know, they will be scolded, so in Japan, they are very taboo about this.
-
The Chinese say that they are the descendants of Wu Dalang, and they may be counted as one
-
Taboo green (think green is unlucky).
It is taboo in Japan to sleep with the head facing north.
-
Why are the Japanese so taboo about the number "4"? Original.
In Japanese, the pronunciation of "4" and "death" is very similar, and sometimes even identical, so when people see the number "4" and read the number composed of "4", they will naturally think of "death" in their minds, and some Japanese people, especially when they go to the door or run errands, often ask for "auspiciousness". If those who are excited to go out to run errands, and let those newlyweds in the middle of a happy month, come into contact with "4" and the number composed of "4", it will cause unpleasant associations and greatly disappoint the fun.
Therefore, Japanese people try to avoid it except in hospital rooms, restaurants, and hotels.
In addition to avoiding the use of numbers such as "4", "14", "42" and "44", try to avoid starting or ending with the word 4 on the ** number and car number. If you have to use it, you should also pronounce the numbers "4", "42", "44", and so on, which are different from "dead".
-
There is a high-end restaurant in Tokyo where toothpicks are not placed on the table, but next to the cash register, so that diners do not have to look ugly in public and avoid disturbing the elegant atmosphere of the restaurant. It is said that toothpicks are also placed in the bathrooms of high-end restaurants, so that the ugliness of picking your teeth is completely closed. It is forbidden to make loud noises in public places, including the Walkman's ** also beware of sound leakage, no wonder when major electrical appliance manufacturers launch new earphone products, they all play an advertising slogan:
It keeps you from leaking! Eating with Japanese people should never put chopsticks into white rice, just as eating with Chinese fishermen should not turn over the cooked fish in front of people, which is among the taboos. However, there is an exception to the problem of sticking chopsticks into white rice, and this is the funeral rite of the Japanese.
Because the deceased is already weak, inserting chopsticks into the white rice is entirely to help the deceased lighten the burden so that it can be eaten smoothly. White rice is the most common offering at funerals, and the Japanese believe that it is the best food on the other side. When people die, everything is white, just like white rice is white, and the so-called "white" is the same concept as "transparent".
Another Japanese architect told me that the most frustrating thing about his work was designing the location of the toilets for the shop, finding a nondescript space that was easy to find, and the bigger the shop, the more difficult it was to design. Finally, when some city hotels receive group tourists, they will allocate rooms according to the specific source of tourists, such as receiving young tourist groups, try to separate them and arrange them to a room in the corner of the hotel, so as not to drink and chat late at night, and the loudness may affect others. In the same way, when you meet a team of the elderly, try to arrange it to one floor, so that you can take care of each other and feel at ease.
In Japan, I usually eat ramen, sushi, rice bowls, rice balls, etc.!
Japan's topography, and product structure are destined to be like technology-based development, and Japan's automobiles, electronics are very developed. The country's corporate customers are oriented in a global direction. In Japan, small workshops can also make up their minds to make the world's best products. >>>More
1. Antiquity, antiquity 1. Paleolithic (?) 10,000 years ago) 2. Jomon period (10,000 years ago - 3rd century BC) 3. Yayoi period (3rd century BC - 3rd century AD) 4. Kofun period (early 4th century - mid-6th century) 5. Asuka period (mid-6th century - early 8th century) 6. Nara period (early 8th century - end of 8th century) 7. Heian period (late 8th century - end of 12th century) 2. Middle Ages 1. Kamakura period (late 12th century - 30s of the 14th century)2. Nanboku Dynasty Period} 3, Muromachi Period (14th Century 30s - 16th Century 70s) 3, Modern Era 1, Azuchi-Momoyama Period 1573 1603 2, Edo Period 1603 1868 4, Modern Times, Modern 1, Meiji 1868 1912 2, Taisho 1912 1926 3, Showa 1926 1989 4, Heisei 1989
Summary. If Japanese people don't have an ID card, they don't have a social security number, and they can't pay pension insurance. Article 58: The State is to establish a nationwide unified personal social security number. >>>More
You have been deceived in Japan in this situation, I guess you can only call the police in Japan**. But because you are Chinese, I don't know if people accept it or whether they will help you find it.