The Shinto Shrine Archway - Torii written in Kanji is 鳥居
Torii.
A common Shinto symbol is the Torii. The Torii is a traditional Japanese gate. The Torii is a red-orange color gate that when you pass through it, signals that you are going to enter a sacred place and should act appropriately and accordingly. In the past, people believed that birds would carry the dead and the Torii would be their resting place.
Torii
There is not actually a place called "Torii". A torii is a traditional Japanese which is usually found at the entrance of, or inside of, a Shinto shrine. The torii is a symbolic mark of the transition from the profane to the sacred.
That word does not exist in Japanese. In Japanese symbols, it would be written スペンサー
The Japanese arch thing is called a "torii." It is a traditional gate commonly found at the entrance of Shinto shrines in Japan. Torii gates symbolize the transition from the mundane to the sacred and mark the boundary between the human and spiritual realms.
Eclipse in Japanese is Nisshoku (knee-show-coo) - Japanese symbols - 日食
Same (sa may)
It is called a 'torii.'
The word is made up of symbols. Use Google translate to see what it is.
クラゲ kurage koo-rah-gei
So-Se-Ji in katakana and in hiragana with these symbols.