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  1. 18 sty 2018 · The Japanese build spaces as extensions of culture and values, rather than as places where culture happens. Similarly, Japanese spaces tend to focus on structuring interactions,...

  2. 1 maj 2020 · These two concepts of space and time are ever-present within traditional Japanese culture and can explain not only Japanese architecture and design but also Japanese customs and personal...

  3. It wouldn't be hard to add spaces to Japanese, and in fact spaces are often added to texts aimed at young children anyway to make it easier for them to read, but adults find writing like that to be "childish" and that cultural bias against spacing isn't going away any time soon.

  4. 23 kwi 2020 · Ma is the fundamental time and space from which life needs to grow. Space for the Japanese psyche directly impacts the individual’s progress. These principles are universal, when applied...

  5. 21 maj 2012 · My starting point was my understanding that time and space had historically played an important part in Japanese culture, from the tradition of Ukiyo-e prints, a genre of woodblocks of leisure scenes translated as “prints of the floating world,” to the slow movements of Noh theatre to fusama, the interchangeable sliding doors integral to ...

  6. 14 gru 2018 · Japanese conceptions of space and spatiality differ from those of the Western world: their interpretation centres around various concepts that encompass not only space, but also time and human relationships, contrary to the West’s interpretation of space as a place between physical boundaries.

  7. 25 sie 2024 · The short answer is no. Unlike English or most other European languages, traditional Japanese text does not typically use spaces to separate different words. This can perplex Japanese learners accustomed to using blank spaces to indicate where one word ends and another begins. Why Are There No Spaces in Japanese?

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