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1 I | temples or shrines of pure Shintô are all built in the same
2 I | venture only to say that Shintô shrines evoke such a feeling.
3 I | impression which they make. Those Shintô terms which we loosely render
4 I | strange character of the Shintô miya or yashiro, - containing
5 I | alone in the presence of a Shintô shrine, I have the sensation
6 I | thatched dwellings and a Shintô temple, composing the village
7 I(1)| Shintô parish temple.
8 I | also for use at certain Shintô festivals. The child kindled
9 III | justifying both the~{p. 49}~Shintô doctrine of ancestor worship
10 III | familiar Shôgun, Taikun, Shintô, Kyûshû, Hideyoshi, and
11 III | could become a Buddhist or Shintô priest. Religion, indeed,
12 III | the magnificent memorial Shintô temple built by the government,
13 III | spirit after the~{p. 74}~Shintô manner. The tombstones were
14 III | rites were performed by Shintô priests. This fact interested
15 VII | temples, both Buddhist and Shintô, with very~{p. 167}~ancient
16 VII | there is a still more famous Shintô temple, Sumiyoshi, dedicated
17 X(1)| sentence seems a thought of Shintô rather than of Buddhism.~
18 X(1)| the Buddhas, and for the Shintô Gods, - Kami. Nono-San wo
19 X(1)| Kami, - according to Shintô thought.~
20 X(2)| was Buddhist teaching in a Shintô disguise, - the deities
21 X(2)| doctrines, and the blending of Shintô with Buddhist religion.
22 X(2)| permission to establish a new Shintô sect, under the name of
23 X(2)| Buddhist sutra Fudô Kyô into a Shintô prayer-book, under {footnote
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