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Modern Japan is a Parliamentary Democracy. It does not have States, which are sovereign entities, but it does have Prefectures. Each of Japan's 47 prefectures has an elected governor, an elected legislature, and an administrative bureaucracy and is further divided into cities, towns and villages.
Tokyo, the de facto capital of Japan, is on Honshu, which is the largest island of the Japanese chain. But Honshu is divided into five different prefectures, which include Chūbum, Chūgoku, Kansai, Kantō, and Tōhoku. The prefectures might be considered the equivalent of U.S. "states" and each of the prefectures has a capital. As such, Honshu itself doesn't have a capital any more than, say, New England in the U.S. has a capital. Wikipedia has more information, and a link to their post can be found below.
yes it is they gained their independence a while back now
No individual country or people are "independent" of any other in our connected industrial civilization. The Republic of the Philippines has some agricultural wealth, but little heavy industry and not much in the way of medical technology. They do not (or did not, when I lived there) produce any cars or trucks; these were imported from Japan or from the USA.
Changes in the independent variable are independent of changes in any other variable,
Huckleberry Finn had a habit of being independent and free-spirited, often seeking adventure and avoiding authority. He also had a habit of using informal language and dialect in his speech.
The state not subjecting to any authority is called an autonomous state. It has the determining authority regarding fiscal,administrative, law and order and other spheres and no interference from any other authority is entertained.
Inside any Country any sort of acess to Information should be controlled by Government as it has the authority to decide best in Public Interest of its citizens. In hands of Private concerns & independent bodies, Security of Information can't be guaranteed.
No, Japan does not have any natural oil reserves.
Any variable can be an independent variable: it depends on the context.
Depending on the context, any variable can be independent (or dependent).
That can never happen. If you are an "independent" the you are standing alone, by yourself and not affiliated to any party. Thus there is no such thing as an "independent partycandidate".