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Bungo Independent
Bungo may refer to: Places * Bungo, Angola, a town in Uíge Province, Angola. * Bungo, Luanda, a borough (''bairro'') of Luanda, Angola * Bungo Channel or Bungo Strait, between the Japanese islands of Kyushu and Shikoku * Bungo Province of ancient Japan * Bungo Suidō Prefectural Natural Park on the shore of Bungo Channel * Bungo Regency, a regency in Jambi Province, Indonesia * Bungo Township, Cass County, Minnesota * Muara Bungo, a city in Jambi Province, Indonesia * Lungué Bungo River or Lungwebungu River, in Angola and Zambia, tributary of the Zambesi * Strathbungo, an old village in Scotland, now engulfed by Glasgow People and characters * Bungo Fukusaki (1959–), professional shogi player * Bungo Shirai (1928–), president of the Chunichi Shimbun and owner of the Chunichi Dragons * Bungo Tsuda (1918–2007), Japanese politician * Bungo Yoshida (1934–2008), Japanese puppeteer, modernizer of bunraku * Bungo, a character in the ''Wombles ''The Wombles'' are fiction ...
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Bungo, Angola
Bungo is a town and municipality in Uíge Province, Angola. The municipality, established on August 16, 1916, has about 2156 square kilometers and 37,153 residents in 2014. It is bounded by the municipalities of Damba (north), Sanza Pombo (east), Puri and Negage (south), and Uíge Uíge ( kg, Wizidi), formerly Carmona, is a provincial capital city in northwestern Angola, with a population of 322,531 (2014 census), and a municipality, with a population of 519,196 (2014 census), located in the province of the same name. I ... and Mucaba (west). The capital, of the same name, is its only town. References Populated places in Uíge Province 1916 establishments in the Portuguese Empire {{Angola-geo-stub ...
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Bungo Yoshida
Bungo Yoshida (May 3, 1934 – January 16, 2008) was a Japanese puppeteer, who built a whole new audience for the traditional puppetering form of ''bunraku'' by combining it with rock music. Born as Teruo Takahashi in Moriguchi, Osaka in 1934, Yoshida was initiated into the Bunraku theatre as a disciple of Tamagoro Yoshida II in 1951, changing his name to Kotama Yoshida. For twenty years, he performed mostly female roles, until switching to male roles in the 1970s. Concerned by falling audience numbers and a lack of young people taking up ''bunraku'', Yoshida combined the ancient art form with his love of rock music, which he combined for a 1980 adaptation of ''The Love Suicides at Sonezaki'' (''Sonezaki Shinjū'') with the music written and performed by Japanese rock musician Ryudo Uzaki, and occasionally with a live orchestra.
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Kafka Asagiri
is a Japanese manga artist and novelist. Born in Ehime Prefecture, he is best known as the writer of the seinen manga series, '' Bungo Stray Dogs''. History Originally a salaryman working for a car company, Asagiri had been thinking about becoming a scenario writer since his second or third year of work, but the company was so busy that he couldn't write stories while working. He quit the car company at the beginning of 2012. After that, while preparing for job hunting related to screenplays, Asagiri decided to create something that people could watch for free. He started posting videos saying "I wanted to," along with creating videos serving as business cards, believing in the importance of work experience for becoming a professional. Then, his video "Slowly Youmu and the Really Scary Cthulhu Mythos" released on Nico Nico Douga received a great response and became popular. Four months after he uploaded the video, Asagiri was approached by the editor-in-chief of ''Monthly Sh ...
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PS Bungo
Persatuan Sepakbola Bungo (simply known as PS Bungo) is an Indonesian football club based in Bungo Regency, Jambi Jambi is a province of Indonesia. It is located on the east coast of central Sumatra and spans to the Barisan Mountains in the west. Its capital and largest city is Jambi. The province has a land area of 50,160.05 km2, and a sea area of 3, .... They currently compete in the Liga 3. References External linksPersibut BungoLiga-Indonesia.co.id Football clubs in Indonesia Football clubs in Jambi {{Indonesia-footyclub-stub ...
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JDS Bungo (MST-464)
JS ''Bungo'' (MST-464) is the second ship of ''Uraga''-class mine countermeasure vessel. Construction and career ''Bungo'' was laid down at Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Tamano Shipyard on 4 July 1996 and launched on 24 April 1997. She was commissioned on 23 March 1998. She was transferred to the Yokosuka District Force. Her and multiple other ships departed Kobe Port for Alexandria, Egypt on September 23 with the transport ship JS Ōsumi and the supply ship JS Tokiwa to transport temporary housing as an aid to the damage caused by the northwestern Turkey earthquake that occurred on August 17, 1999. At an average speed of 18 kt (about 33 km / h), she made the first long-distance continuous voyage in the history of the Maritime Self-Defense Force for 23 consecutive days without calling, and entered the port of Haydarpasa in Istanbul on October 19. She was scheduled to arrive at Wu on November 22, but she was in a top-heavy condition due to the empty freshwater tank, ...
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Bungo (boat)
Bungo may refer to: Places * Bungo, Angola, a town in Uíge Province, Angola * Bungo, Luanda, a borough (''bairro'') of Luanda, Angola * Bungo Channel or Bungo Strait, between the Japanese islands of Kyushu and Shikoku * Bungo Province of ancient Japan * Bungo Suidō Prefectural Natural Park on the shore of Bungo Channel * Bungo Regency, a regency in Jambi Province, Indonesia * Bungo Township, Cass County, Minnesota * Muara Bungo, a city in Jambi Province, Indonesia * Lungué Bungo River or Lungwebungu River, in Angola and Zambia, tributary of the Zambesi * Strathbungo, an old village in Scotland, now engulfed by Glasgow People and characters * Bungo Fukusaki (1959–), professional shogi player * Bungo Shirai (1928–), president of the Chunichi Shimbun and owner of the Chunichi Dragons * Bungo Tsuda (1918–2007), Japanese politician * Bungo Yoshida (1934–2008), Japanese puppeteer, modernizer of bunraku * Bungo, a character in the ''Wombles'' novels by Elisabeth Beresford ...
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Dugout Canoe
A dugout canoe or simply dugout is a boat made from a hollowed tree. Other names for this type of boat are logboat and monoxylon. ''Monoxylon'' (''μονόξυλον'') (pl: ''monoxyla'') is Greek – ''mono-'' (single) + '' ξύλον xylon'' (tree) – and is mostly used in classic Greek texts. In German, they are called Einbaum ("one tree" in English). Some, but not all, pirogues are also constructed in this manner. Dugouts are the oldest boat type archaeologists have found, dating back about 8,000 years to the Neolithic Stone Age. This is probably because they are made of massive pieces of wood, which tend to preserve better than others, such as bark canoes. Along with bark canoes and hide kayaks, dugouts were also used by Indigenous peoples of the Americas. Construction Construction of a dugout begins with the selection of a log of suitable dimensions. Sufficient wood must be removed to make the vessel relatively light in weight and buoyant, yet still strong enough to supp ...
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Bungo (canoe)
Bungo may refer to: Places * Bungo, Angola, a town in Uíge Province, Angola * Bungo, Luanda, a borough (''bairro'') of Luanda, Angola * Bungo Channel or Bungo Strait, between the Japanese islands of Kyushu and Shikoku * Bungo Province of ancient Japan * Bungo Suidō Prefectural Natural Park on the shore of Bungo Channel * Bungo Regency, a regency in Jambi Province, Indonesia * Bungo Township, Cass County, Minnesota * Muara Bungo, a city in Jambi Province, Indonesia * Lungué Bungo River or Lungwebungu River, in Angola and Zambia, tributary of the Zambesi * Strathbungo, an old village in Scotland, now engulfed by Glasgow People and characters * Bungo Fukusaki (1959–), professional shogi player * Bungo Shirai (1928–), president of the Chunichi Shimbun and owner of the Chunichi Dragons * Bungo Tsuda (1918–2007), Japanese politician * Bungo Yoshida (1934–2008), Japanese puppeteer, modernizer of bunraku * Bungo, a character in the ''Wombles'' novels by Elisabeth Beresford ...
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Bungo (Japanese Language)
The classical Japanese language ( ''bungo'', "literary language"), also called "old writing" ( ''kobun''), sometimes simply called "Medieval Japanese" is the literary form of the Japanese language that was the standard until the early Shōwa period (1926–1989). It is based on Early Middle Japanese, the language as spoken during the Heian period (794–1185), but exhibits some later influences. Its use started to decline during the late Meiji period (1868–1912) when novelists started writing their works in the spoken form. Eventually, the spoken style came into widespread use, including in major newspapers, but many official documents were still written in the old style. After the end of World War II, most documents switched to the spoken style, although the classical style continues to be used in traditional genres, such as haiku and waka. Old laws are also left in the classical style unless fully revised. History Classical Japanese began to be written during the Heian pe ...
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Bungo (fruit)
''Saba comorensis'' is a species of flowering plant in the Apocynaceae family. It is commonly called bungo fruit (pl. mabungo), mbungo, or rubber vine and is widespread across most of tropical Africa as well as in Madagascar and Comoros. It grows in Tanzania and Somalia, for example on the islands of Pemba and Zanzibar in the Indian Ocean. The species belongs to the genus ''Saba'' from the family Apocynaceae. The fruit looks similar to an orange with a hard orange peel but when opened it contains a dozen or so pips, which have the same texture as a mango seed with the fibres and juices all locked in these fibres. The fruit also makes a delicious juice drink which has been described as tasting "somewhere between a mango, an orange and a pineapple" The aromatic juice of the bungo fruit is also popular and highly appreciated on Pemba Island and other parts of coastal Tanzania. Not only in the Tanzanian Mahale Mountains National Park, ''S. comorensis'' is dispersed by chimpanzee ...
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The Wombles
''The Wombles'' are fictional pointy-nosed, furry creatures created by Elisabeth Beresford and originally appearing in a series of children's novels from 1968. They live in burrows, where they aim to help the environment by collecting and recycling rubbish in creative ways. Although Wombles supposedly live in every country in the world, Beresford's stories are primarily concerned with the lives of the inhabitants of the burrow on Wimbledon Common in London, England. The characters gained a higher national profile in the UK in the mid-1970s as a result of the popularity of a BBC-commissioned The Wombles (1973 TV series), children's television show which used stop motion animation, stop-motion animation. A number of spin-off novelty songs also became hits in the British music charts. The Wombles (band), The Wombles pop group was the idea of British singer and composer Mike Batt. The Womble motto is "Make Good Use of Bad Rubbish". This Environmentalism, environmentally friendly mes ...
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