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Page "Nnewi" ¶ 16
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obi and would
A common folk etymology attributes its name to the mixed Portuguese and Tupi phrase morro obi, which would mean " green hill ", but this is disputed.
The obi, or belt, of the kimono would often be supplemented with a heavier sash, so a sword could be slung from it.
If the complainant was not satisfied at this point, he would appeal to the obi of the quarter and the leaders of his family could be summoned to defend their judgment
* or is an obi that has been sewn in two only where the taiko knot would begin.
As married women in the Edo period would have, they blackened their teeth, and tied their obi in front.

obi and first
Boys of age five could wear hakama for the first time, while girls of age seven replaced the simple cords they used to tie their kimono with the traditional obi.
The systematic use of belt colour to denote the rank was first used by Kano Jigoro, the founder of judo, who first devised the colored belt system using obi, and awarded the first black belts to denote a Dan rank in the 1880s.
Each umunna had a first family known as the ' obi '.
A report against an offender or a criminal in the first instance, had to be made to the head of his family at his ancestral home known as obi.
The second type is two-thirds patterned, the so-called " 60 % fukuro obi ", and it is somewhat cheaper and lighter than the first type.

obi and depending
Often the obi adjusts the formality and fanciness of the whole kimono outfit: the same kimono can be worn to very different situations depending on what kind of obi is worn with it.

obi and on
Note that the youth on the left is wearing a distinctly feminine kimono ( red / pink color, double-wide obi belt ).
Some of Miyagi's more notable students were: Seko Higa ( his oldest student and also a student of Kanryo Higaonna ), Miyazato Ei ' ichi ( founder of the Jundokan dojo ), Meitoku Yagi ( founder of the Meibukan dojo, who eventually accepted Miyagi's gi and obi from Miyagi's family ), Seikichi Toguchi ( founder of Shorei-kan Goju-ryu ), and on the Japanese mainland Gōgen Yamaguchi who was the founder of the International Karate do Goju Kai Association and who after training with Miyagi, became the representative of Gōjū-ryū in Japan.
Upon Miyagi's death in 1953, Miyazato inherited his teacher's training equipment, and the family also passed on Miyazato's gi ( uniform ) and obi ( belt ) to him.

obi and .
From 1600 to 1867, more swords were worn through an obi ( sash ), paired with a smaller blade ; both worn edge-up.
), and secured by a sash called an obi, which is tied at the back.
A woman's kimono has additional length to allow for the ohashori, the tuck that can be seen under the obi, which is used to adjust the kimono to the individual wearer.
Over time there have been many variations in color, fabric and style, as well as accessories such as the obi.
A modern use in this manner includes tying the obi ( or belt ) of a martial arts keikogi.
Japanese kimonos are wrapped around the body, sometimes in several layers, and are secured in place by sashes with a wide obi to complete the human parcel.
The left side of the yukata is wrapped over the right side ( commonly reversed with right over left when dressing a body for a funeral ) and secured with an obi sash tied in a bow with the excess or with the koshi-himo and traditionally the bow is placed in the back.
The obi is a very important part of the kimono.
Most women wear a very large elaborate obi, while men typically don a more thin and conservative obi.
* The obi is traditionally part of a Japanese kimono.
Japanese-style mourning dress for women consists of a five-crested plain black silk kimono, black obi and black accessories worn over white undergarments, black zori sandals and white tabi split-toe socks.
This system uses colored belts ( obi ) to indicate rank.
The rear of the garment has a rigid board-like section, called a, below that is a hakama-dome ( 袴止め ) ( a spoon-shaped component sometimes referred to as a hera ) which is tucked into the obi or himo at the rear, and helps to keep the hakama in place.
First, the obi is tied in a special knot ( an " under-hakama knot ") at the rear.
Starting with the front, the ties are brought around the waist and crossed over the top of the knot of the obi.
The ties are brought to the front and crossed below the waist, then tied at the back, under the knot of the obi.
The hakama-dome is then tucked behind the obi, the koshi-ita is adjusted, and the rear ties brought to the front and tied in a variety of ways.
Normally thereafter, Gohan is drawn with a keikogi modeled after Piccolo's own, with the anime recoloring his wristbands from blue to red and, during the Cell Games tournament, his obi from red to blue, despite reverting to the original colors for the former.
The Japanese equivalent of a sash, obi, serves to hold a kimono or yukata together.
It sits behind the obi with the curved ends visible above and below the obi.
Women sometimes carried a small tantō called a kaiken in their obi primarily for self-defense.
Tōgane is home to the Kurenai-kai School of Japanese embroidery, which produces handmade obi and kimono in the traditional Japanese style.

would and serve
The place had been cheap -- just the little he had left after Amelia's burial -- and it would serve its purpose.
Incapable of self-delusion, the Founding Fathers found the crisis of their time to be equally grave, and yet they had confidence that America would surmount it and that a republic of free peoples would prosper and serve as an example to a world aching for liberty.
New machinery of coordination should not be our primary objective in the foreseeable future -- though perhaps the `` political general staff '' of Western leaders proposed by Sir Anthony Eden would serve a useful purpose.
No fold could be accidental, each turn of the drapery had to serve organically, to cover the Madonna's slender legs and feet so that they would give substantive support to Christ's body, to intensify her inner turmoil.
One instrument thus would serve both purposes.
Du Pont would be enjoined from having as a director, officer, or employee anyone who was simultaneously an officer or employee of General Motors, and no director, officer, or employee of Du Pont could serve as a director of General Motors without court approval.
Both Cook's and Russell's lives were threatened by the Mexicans following the killing, but the company officers felt that in the end, it would serve to quiet them despite their immediate emotion.
Such mannerisms would be less worthy of remark, were it not that in Great Expectations, as in no other of Dickens' novels, hands serve as a leitmotif of plot and theme -- a kind of unifying symbol or natural metaphor for the book's complex of human interrelationships and the values and attitudes that motivate them.
Interest remained, however, in the possibility that it would serve as a useful supplementary method for counteracting spoilage losses and for preserving some foods at lower over-all costs than freezing, or without employing heat or chemicals with their attendant taste alterations.
As a matter of fact, Albert S. Flint expressed his conviction that `` her physical strength, her mental power, her lively interest in all objects about her and her readiness to serve her fellow beings '' would have led her `` to a distinguished career amongst the noted women of this country ''.
A few of the more prominent must serve as examples of what a complete listing and description would disclose.
Nothing less would serve.
They had one son, Col. William Preston Johnston, who would also serve in the Confederate Army.
This outside scriptwriting would serve Kurosawa as a lucrative sideline lasting well into the 1960s, long after he became world-famous .< ref >
A slab of rock with an iron staple in it to attach a chain to would serve the purpose, as would any dense object of appropriate weight ( e. g. an engine block ).
Their unique relationship would serve an important role during Agesilaus ' later campaigns in Asia Minor.
This wall would serve as the main defense for the acropolis until the 5th century.
It might appear at first sight as though one connection would serve, but the differences in pressure on which these instruments depend are so minute, that the pressure of the air in the room where the recording part is placed has to be considered.
Savoy would then serve as a gateway into France by way of the mountain passes or, alternatively, an invasion with naval support along the Mediterranean coast via Nice and Toulon in connection with redoubled Allied efforts in Spain.
Cranmer's work of simplification and revision was also applied to the Daily Offices, which were to become Morning, and Evening Prayer ; and which he hoped would also serve as a daily form of prayer to be used by the Laity, thus replacing both the late medieval lay observation of the Latin Hours of the Virgin, and its English equivalent, the Primer.
If the experiment were done in English, since Searle knows English, he would be able to take questions and give answers without any algorithms for English questions, and he would be affectively aware of what was being said and the purposes it might serve: Searle passes the Turing test of answering the questions in both languages, but he's only conscious of what he's doing when he speaks English.
Although cumin seeds contain a relatively large percentage of iron, extremely large quantities of cumin would need to be consumed for it to serve as a significant dietary source ( see nutrition data ).

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