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Definition of Nagano
1. Noun. A city in central Honshu to the northwest of Tokyo; site of a Buddhist shrine.
Group relationships: Hondo, Honshu, Japan, Nihon, Nippon
Definition of Nagano
1. Proper noun. A city in Japan ¹
2. Proper noun. A prefecture in Japan ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Nagano
Literary usage of Nagano
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Foundations of Japan: Notes Made During Journeys of 6,000 Miles in the by John William Robertson Scott (1922)
"GOLDSMITH I WENT back to Nagano to visit the silk industrial regions. My route
lay through the prefectures of Saitama and Gumma. ..."
2. An International Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage Facility: Exploring a Russian by Glenn E. Schweitzer, A. Chelsea Sharber (2005)
"... Experience of Japan* Koji Nagano Central Research Institute of Electric Power
Industry (CRIEPI) After years of nuclear energy production and use, ..."
3. A Concise Dictionary of the Principal Roads, Chief Towns and Villages of by Willis Norton Whitney (1889)
"Fujioka (Gumma) to Oni-ishi Mamba „ Narahara „ Ohinata (Nagano) 3 ri I cho 5 15
Shi M4h ••-«»• ,v :.l.<- 6 15 6 9 5^ pref. rd., ..."
4. Terry's Japanese Empire by Thomas Philip Terry (1914)
"From Yokohama vi4 Tokyo to Karuizawa, Nagano, Naoetsu, and Niigata (Sado Island).
Shin-etsu Line of the Imperial Government Railways. ..."
5. The National Wealth of Japan by Eikichi Igarashi, Hideomi Takahashi, Shigenobu Ōkuma (1906)
"Yen 20.323,980 being the total value of building lots in the villages in Nagano
Ken, the total area of which is n,291 die I tan, reckoned at Yen 180 per Ian ..."
6. A Text-book of Physiological Chemistry: By John A. Mandel by Olof Hammarsten (1908)
"According to the extensive experiments of ROHMANN and Nagano, saccharose is ...
Nagano 4 contends that the pentoses are absorbed more slowly than hexoses. ..."
7. A Text-book of Physiological Chemistry by Olof Hammarsten (1911)
"R, ROHMANN and Nagano), and it probably is absorbed as such in these animals if
it does not undergo fermentation, or, as ROHMANN and Nagano 2 assumed, ..."