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Honne and tatemae Article Talk From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia A 15 languages Read Edit View history Tools "Westerner writes about Japanese anything" starterpack This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues [show] on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages) In Japan, honne and tatemae are Japanese terms relating to a person's feelings and outward behaviors.[1] Honne refers to a person's true feelings and desires (‡ª, hon'ne, "true sound"), and tatemae refers contrastingly to the behavior and opinions one displays in public (tatemae, "built in front", "façade"). This distinction began to be made in the post-war era.[2]:35 Introduces a Japanese term, only to immediately provide the English equivalent, completely refuting A person's honne may be contrary to what is expected by society or what is required according to one's position and circumstances, the cultural uniqueness that necessitates the inclusion of said term in the first place and they are often kept hidden, except with one's closest friends. Tatemae is what is expected by society and required according to one's position and circumstances, and these may or may not match one's honne. In many cases, tatemae leads to outright telling of lies in order to avoid exposing the true inward feelings. In English speaking countries they are telling "white lies." "Oh my science, you mean to tell me people's outward expressions can be very different from how they actually feel on the inside?" In order to facilitate even cooking, the ingredient is cut into small, roughly uniform shapes. Skewers or kushi are made with bamboo or Japanese cypress, and shape as well as length varies to use for the type of food: flat skewers are used for minced meat, for example.[2][3] Meat beef (gyūniku), pork meat (butaniku), cartilage (nankotsu) and offal (horumon), horse meat (baniku). Seafood Muroran yakitori is actually pork, not chicken sweetfish (ayu), minced and seasoned Atlantic horse mackerel (aji) and sardine (iwashi), prawn and shrimp (ebi), Japanese scallop (hotate), squid and cuttlefish (ika). Vegetable onion (tamanegi), eggplant (nasu),[4] cherry tomato, potato, pumpkin (kabocha), scallion (negi), ginkgo nuts (ginnan), green bell pepper (piman), garlic (ninniku), Japanese pepper (shishitō). Products and prepared Tōfu,[4] nattō, steamed rice.[5 Writes about a completely ubiquitous concept that exists in every society ever, but you see the Japanese have their own word for it therefore it's UNIQUE and NOVEL Yatai (food cart) Article Talk From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia For the listed company in the Shanghai Stock Exchange, see Yatai Group. A yatai () is a small, mobile food stall in Japan typically selling ramen or other food. The name literally means "shop stand".[2][3] The stall is set up in the early evening on walkways and removed late at night or in the early morning hours.[4] Though the practice of mobile food stands dates back to the 17th century,[5] yatai became popular and widespread in the Meiji period (1868–1912) and were two-wheeled pushcarts constructed of wood. [2] Yatai were popular during and following World War II, but Japanese authorities imposed regulations ahead of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, citing health concerns.[6] Today, they are prevalent in Fukuoka, but continue to dwindle.[7] "It's just not the same, okay?" A 8 languages Read Edit View history Tools たこ焼 Yatai at a summer festival[1] シバシ

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