Japanese call it "hara," the physical point about two inches below your navel.
In American propaganda, much was made of Japanese calls to devotion to death.
It was all about what the Japanese call wabi.
They are what the Japanese call mingei, folk art of the people, un-self-conscious and created without patronage.
The Japanese call that figure conservative, but say that even if it is correct, the supply is ample.
Another route into the company is through contact with what the Japanese call O.B.'s, or "old boys," who are alumni of one's college.
This testing allows them to come up with what the Japanese call 'counter measures.'
Japanese calls for devotion to death were used to present a war of extermination as the only possibility, without any question as to whether it was desirable.
That is because what the Japanese call "money politics" is a deeply embedded and generally accepted fact of political life here.
Hardest hit have been regional areas built around one type of industry - what the Japanese call "castle towns."