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Renju and Japanese
It was named Renju by Japanese journalist Ruikou Kuroiwa ( 黒岩涙香 ) on December 6, 1899 in a Japanese newspaper Yorozu chouhou ( 萬朝報 ).

Renju and is
* Renju is played on a 15 × 15 board, with the rules of three and three, four and four, and overlines applied to Black only and with opening rules, some of which are following the swap pattern.
The only fair opening rule currently is swap2 based on swap from Renju and first seen on kurnik. org.
* Renju International Federation, Renju is the professional variant of board game Gomoku

Renju and Gomoku
Games currently supported are Amazons, Ataxx, Backgammon, Byte, Chase, Chess, DVONN, Exxit, Focus, Gess, GIPF, Go, Gobblet, Gomoku + Renju, Hex, Hive, Hnefatafl, Jungle, Kropki, Kuba, Lines of Action, Neutron, Nine Men's Morris, Octi, Philosopher's Football, Plateau, PÜNCT, Quadrature, Reversi ( Othello ), Sahara, Shogi, TAMSK, Tantrix, Trax, Tripples, Tumbling Down, TwixT, Xiangqi, YINSH and ZÈRTZ.
Renju eliminates the " Perfect Win " situation in Gomoku by adding special conditions for the first player ( Black ).
Unlike Gomoku, Renju has a unique sequence of opening moves called an " opening rule ".

Renju and .
The Extra General Assembly of Renju International Federation in 2008 created 3 new sets of rules for openings that are to replace the above old sequence of moves: Soosõrv, Taraguchi, and Yamaguchi.
The General Assembly of Renju International Federation in 2009 certified Sakata opening rule as proposed by Russia.
The General Assembly of Renju International Federation in 2011 certified modified opening rules such as Taraguchi-N and Soosõrv-N.
World Championships in Renju have occurred every second year, since 1989.

Japanese and is
Assuming the lower figure for the big blast and one shot estimated by the Japanese at 10 megatons, a conservative computation is that the 24 announced tests produced a total yield of at least 60 megatons.
In is she Chinese or Japanese??
The Japanese sake is wine fermented from rice grain.
Mrs. Hosaka is one of the Japanese women one reads about -- beautiful, artistically talented, an artful manager of her big household -- ( four boys and four girls ), and yet looking like a pampered, gentle Japanese woman.
I was told that it is quite likely that Japanese soldiers would not fight again -- for why should they??
Masu is also teaching in a municipally-sponsored school for Japanese widows in Tokyo.
Here again it was vacation time and there were many things I could not see, but I was able to visit with a professor who is famous in Japanese circles and be guided through the grounds by his assistant.
Field Marshal Slim is more impressed by the courage of Japanese soldiers than he is by the ability of their commanders.
But the greater reason for fumbling, stumbling American leadership is due to the shock her pride suffered when the Japanese attacked at Pearl Harbor.
Most of them have been assimilated, but sometimes a man in Miyagi or Akita prefectures is much more hairy than the average Japanese, and occasionally a girl will be strikingly lovely, her coloring warmed and improved by a little of the tawny honey-in-the-sun tint of the invaders from the South.
She was taller than most Japanese girls, and had the exquisitely willowy form of the Japanese girl who is lucky enough to be tall.
Tommy, of course, had never heard of a kotowaza, or Japanese proverb, which says, `` Tanin yori miuchi '', and is literally translated as `` Relatives are better than strangers ''.
In Japanese, the abacus is called soroban (, lit.
The 1 / 4 abacus, which is suited to decimal calculation, appeared circa 1930, and became widespread as the Japanese abandoned hexadecimal weight calculation which was still common in China.
The use of the soroban is still taught in Japanese primary schools as part of mathematics, primarily as an aid to faster mental calculation.
This organization is used in Southeast Asia, Tibet, Korean hangul, and even Japanese kana, which is not an alphabet.
Japanese is first attested in a few short inscriptions from the 5th century AD, such as the Inariyama Sword.
The first substantial text in Japanese, however, is the Kojiki, which dates from 712 AD.
However Juhanen ( 1992 ) is skeptical about an affiliation of Japanese to Altaic languages, while Róna-Tas ( 1998: 77 ) remarked that a relationship between Altaic and Japanese, if it ever existed, must be more remote than the relationship of any two of the Indo-European languages.
Ramsey ( 2004: 340 ) stated that " the genetic relationship between Korean and Japanese, if it in fact exists, is probably more complex and distant than we can imagine on the basis of our present state of knowledge ", a concept later restated by Lee ( 2011 ).

Japanese and professional
* Black Buffalo ( wrestler ) ( born 1974 ), Japanese professional wrestler
* Orix Buffaloes, a Japanese professional baseball team
* Kintetsu Buffaloes, a former Japanese professional baseball team
* 1966 – Jinsei Shinzaki, Japanese professional wrestler
Den and the original members of Ondekoza grew much of their own food, learned carpentry, studied Japanese classical and folk arts, and began a training regimen similar to professional athletes.
* 1956 – Junji Hirata, Japanese professional wrestler
* Daigo Saito ( born 1980 ), Japanese professional drifting driver
* Daigo Umehara ( born 1981 ), Japanese professional video gamer
* 1980 – Shinsuke Nakamura, Japanese professional wrestler
* 1953 – Takashi Ishikawa, Japanese sumo and professional wrestler
* 1973 – Masato Tanaka, Japanese professional wrestler
* 1950 – Osamu Kido, Japanese professional wrestler
* 1950 – Genichiro Tenryu, Japanese professional wrestler
* 1965 – Naoki Sano, Japanese professional wrestler
* 1999 – Shohei Baba, Japanese professional wrestler ( b. 1938 )
* 1948 – Wajima Hiroshi, Japanese sumo wrestler ( the 54th Yokozuna ) and professional wrestler
* 1967 – Manabu Nakanishi, Japanese professional wrestler
* Leon ( wrestler ), ( born 1980 ), Japanese professional wrestler
* 1988 – Katsuhiko Nakajima, Japanese professional wrestler
* Chiba Lotte Marines, a Japanese professional baseball team
* 1852 – Honinbo Shuei, Japanese professional board game player ( d. 1907 )
* 1966 – Yoshinari Ogawa, Japanese professional wrestler
* 1947 – Yutaka Fukumoto, Japanese professional baseball player
* 1958 – Rissei Ō, Japanese professional Go player
* 1976 – Kohei Suwama, Japanese professional wrestler

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