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My family are standard-issue Caucasian Americans.
However we spent two different spans of a few yrs each living in a few towns not far from Tokyo; once before 1960 and the other time btw 1968-1971 so we learned a bit aobut some of the older, traditional aspects/ Japanese life/ arts/ etc.
In a general sense, my understanding is that we heard reference to the interior walls in traditional Japanese homes as being "rice paper walls".
Paper
Because it keeps the room warm
I am Japanese and I know how to make paper balloons but I don't know how to make paper balls.
To make ugly walls look better.
What country uses paper for walls?
you need to find a japan like building
THE ABILITY TO SEE THROUGH WALLS.
So people can make canoes, firewood, walls for their homes or paper
Cuz the japanese are so poor all they could use was paper even as walls in their buildings. So they use acetate paper for windows. Then shower curtains. Then clothes... Etc. Im not joking
Toilet paper is phirigami in Japanese.
It means 'paper folding', from 'ori' - 'folding', and 'kami' - 'paper'. (kami becomes gami here, some words in Japanese change like this when formed into a compound word)
Origami is the Japanese art of folded paper.