They are called Prefectures, or "Ken" in Japanese.
The goal of the United States was to defeat the Japanese. This meant the removal of the Japanese from many islands in the Pacific Ocean, the destruction of the Japanese Navy, and the surrender of Japan.
The word "Nihon" translated to English means Japan. When the Japanese people refer to their land, they say Nihon or Nippon (日本)Similarly, they don't call themselves Japanese, they say they are Nihonjin 日本人meaning 'Japan person'= Japanese---"Nihon" is Japanese for the word "Japan". In Japanese, one doesn't say "Japan", they say "Nihon".Nihon ni itta. (I went to Japan.)It's not, "Japan ni itta"
The United States called for a surrender of Japan in the Potsdam Declaration on July 26, 1945, threatening Japan with "prompt and utter destruction".
Hopefully this will answer your question, but the attacks made by japan against the united states pretty much severed the Japanese citizens from moving.
It was a deal in which the Japanese government agreed to control emigration to the United States. =APEX
Prefectures :)
Japanese call japan Nippon of Nihonn
Japanese yen
Japanese people call Christmas, Kurisumasu.
The Japanese name for Japan is Nihon, and officially Nippon (nippon-koku, state of Japan).
People from Japan are call "Japanese People".
Yes, but we call it japan because that is how it is translated in English.
The money in Japan is called Yen
The traditional Japanese teacher strives to be "strict but kind".
Honda is Japanese. Acura started in the United States in 1986 and arrived in Japan in 2000.
The goal of the United States was to defeat the Japanese. This meant the removal of the Japanese from many islands in the Pacific Ocean, the destruction of the Japanese Navy, and the surrender of Japan.
Yen (in Japanese language it is pronounced "en")