yes and no becuase in new zealand the sushi is the same style of how you make it but it tastes different. in japan you do not find cooked meat in sushi wheres in new zealand you do.
Japan did not hate New Zealand. During World War II, Japan embarked upon a campaign of dominance of the Pacific, and this included the islands of New Zealand.
New Zealand and Japan both have maritime climates, they are affected by the sea around them. Both countries have several islands situated in a roughly North to South line.
That title was used by japan in its Imperialistic expansion days, and would not be appropriate. Even Japan changed its flag because of the excesses carried out under the old 'rising sun' flag.
No New Zealand is not part of the Australian continent. New Zealand is geographically and physically distant from Australia and is not on a continent. In geographic terms it is an isolated nation and island group.
no you can not and ill tell you why its because japan and new Zealand are different countries
yes and no becuase in new zealand the sushi is the same style of how you make it but it tastes different. in japan you do not find cooked meat in sushi wheres in new zealand you do.
No, Japan is north of Australia and New Zealand.
New Zealand
Japan did not hate New Zealand. During World War II, Japan embarked upon a campaign of dominance of the Pacific, and this included the islands of New Zealand.
The monetary unit in the nation of Japan is the Japanese Yen. The monetary unit of New Zealand is the New Zealand dollar.
New Zealand.
- Japan has a much larger population. - Japan is a bigger country than New Zealand.
Of course Fiji. New Zealand is just kilometres away from Fiji.
Yes, but in inconsequential amounts. Not just New Zealand, but whole world
Japan is in the northern hemisphere and New Zealand is in the southern hemisphere, therefore their seasons are opposite. When it is winter for one, it is summer for the other.
New Zealand celebrates the New Year ahead of Australia.