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kyoto
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Kyoto

city in Japan, from kyo + to, both meaning "capital." Founded 794 as Heionkyo "Capital of Calm and Peace," it also has been known as Miyako and Saikyo. Kyoto Protocol so called because it was initially adopted Dec. 11, 1997, in the Japanese city.

Wikipedia
Kyoto

is a city located in the central part of the island of Honshu, Japan. It has a population close to 1.5 million. Formerly the Imperial capital of Japan for more than one thousand years, it is now the capital city of Kyoto Prefecture located in the Kansai region, as well as a major part of the Kyoto-Osaka-Kobe metropolitan area. Kyoto is also known as the thousand-year capital.

Kyoto (disambiguation)

Kyoto is a Japanese city, and the capital of Kyoto Prefecture.

Kyoto may also refer to:

  • Kyoto Prefecture, a jurisdiction in Japan
  • Kyoto Protocol, an international Framework Convention on Climate Change
  • Kyoto Sanga F.C., a football (soccer) club in Kyoto
  • Kyoto University (or the University of Kyoto) in Kyoto
  • Kyoto Electronics, a Mexican electronics company
  • Kyoto, a danzan-ryū technique of jujutsu
  • Kyoto (Yung Lean song), a song by Swedish rapper Yung Lean
  • Kyoto (Skrillex song), a song by the electronic music producer Skrillex
  • Kyoto (album), a 1964 album by Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers
Kyoto (Skrillex song)

"Kyoto" is a song by American electronic music producer Skrillex featuring Sirah, taken from his fourth EP as Skrillex, Bangarang. Musically, the song has multiple influences of drum and bass, dubstep and electro house, while also having notable elements of hip hop music and metal music, using "heavy, distorted guitar rhythms" within its composition. The song received generally mixed reviews from music critics, with some criticizing its use of formula in comparison to his previous material. Due to strong digital downloads after the EP's release, the song charted in several countries worldwide, including Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and United States.

Kyoto (album)

Kyoto is an album by Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, recorded in 1964 and released on the Riverside label.

Kyoto (Yung Lean song)

"Kyoto" is a song by Swedish rapper Yung Lean, released in 2013.

Usage examples of "kyoto".

The daimyo happened to be in Kyoto and he came to the Golden Dragon and he thought of the game with the mask.

It might be that the daimyo meant to kill him, after all, and would try to kill the commissaris in Kyoto at the same time.

Most evenings she could be found beneath the glare of the small halogen lamp, entering data into her computer, scanning images of genetic mutations involving female shark moths exposed to dioxane, corresponding with other researchers in Melbourne and Kyoto, Siberia and London.

If he had idled in Kyoto for another month, there might have been no castle or clan to return to, but he reached Gifu Castle without incident.

By the time Ieyasu arrived at Hamamatsu Nobunaga was already on his way to Kyoto.

And indeed in the Heian period the exceptional visual attraction of the mandalas and other Shingon icons greatly helped to endear esotericism to the Kyoto courtiers, who were finely sensitive to beauty in all its forms.

The son of a wealthy peasant family of the Kumamoto region of northern Kyushu, Tokutomi received Western training as a youth in his native Kumamoto and later studied at the Christian university, Doshisha, in Kyoto.

But the new Meiji leaders, who included some Kyoto courtiers along with samurai, were men of the future, not the past.

Instead of having lay monks live with him at the villa, he had a young soldier and three menservants to attend him, and to the curious who inquired with some surprise whether the occupant of the villa was a priest or a layman, the Abbot gravely explained that the servants were not his but those of a person of high rank from Kyoto, who was visiting him.

In November 1945, university students in Tokyo, Kyoto, Nagoya, and Kyushu began establishing autonomous student federations that laid the basis for the postwar student movement.

China in 804 and returned to found the Tendai sect of Buddhism at the Enryakuji, a temple he had earlier opened on Mount Hiei northeast of Kyoto.

That the dagger had not been found and that an ultranationalist emperor worshiper in Kyoto had upped his offer to Y25 million-what, five years of police pay?

The first half-century of Muro-machi times, 1336 to 1392, is also designated the epoch of the Northern and Southern Courts, inasmuch as Godaigo and his successors maintained an opposition Southern Court at Yoshino during this period that challenged the legitimacy of what it regarded as the puppet Northern Court of the Ashikaga in Kyoto.

Already there were rumors that the ex-Emperor and his advisers had caused the disturbance to stir up further enmity between the rival monasteries, and even as the earliest arrivals set foot in Kyoto, new reports were heard that the Cloistered Emperor had sent his deputies to confer with the Enryakuji monks, who were rallying, fully armed, at West Sakamoto.

As races were held on straight courses, wide enough for ten horses to run abreast, it was even possible to have contests on any of the main avenues of Kyoto.