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is a rechargeable contactless smart card used as a fare card on train lines in Japan. Launched in November 18, 2001, the card is usable currently in the Kantō region, at JR East stations near Sendai and Niigata. The card can also be used interchangeably with JR West's ICOCA card in the Kansai region and San'yō region in Okayama, Hiroshima, and Yamaguchi Prefectures, and also with JR Central's TOICA starting from spring of 2008, JR Kyushu's SUGOCA, Nishitetsu's Nimoca, and Fukuoka City Subway's Hayakaken area in Fukuoka City and its suburb areas, starting from spring of 2010. The card is also increasingly being accepted as a form of electronic money for purchases at stores and kiosks, especially within train stations. As of October 2009, 30.01 million Suica cards are in circulation.
Since Suica is completely interchangeable with the Pasmo card (see for the complete listing of companies and lines that accept Suica) in the greater Tokyo area, it is supported on virtually any train, tramway, and bus system (excluding various limited and shinkansen trains, as well as a few local buses as the system is still in the process of being extended to all routes).
Šuica (or Šujica) is a village in the municipality of Tomislavgrad in western Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The village is named after the river Šuica. The very name, signifies not only the settlement but also the area of Šuica Valley around the upper course of the river where there are several villages situated at the crossroads of Bosnia, Dalmatia and Herzegovina.
The River Šuica (or Šujica) is a river in the region of Tropolje in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Its sources are Veliki Stržanj and Mali Stržanj. It flows through and draines most of the Šuica Valley and Duvno Field. The river disappears underground near the village Kovači in southwestern Duvno Field and partially re-emerges at the source of Ričina in village Prisoje and then flows into the accumulation lake Buško Blato.
Veliki Stržanj 01.jpg|Veliki Stržanj Mali Stržanj.jpg|Mali Stržanj