bold = Main text
Chapter grey = Comment text
1 I | is wooden latticework, - usually a grating of bars closely
2 I(1) | Usually hinoki (Chamæcyparis obtusa).
3 I | than respected. The people usually called him Ojiisan, which
4 II | pipe - geishas' pipes are usually of silver - is used instead
5 II | about celebrated places usually containing some amatory
6 III | national attire. What we usually call grace in Japanese women
7 V | to the imagination, and usually betrays the effort which
8 VII | dark blue; any crowd of men usually presenting a mass of this
9 VII | is wool, and the color usually light brown or grey. That
10 VII | ladies, which has no cape, is usually of black broadcloth, with
11 VII | is the time of service usually exacted in the dry goods
12 VII | importance of the locality, but usually built upon the same general
13 VII | image but one, - and that usually small, - the figure of Amida.
14 VII | may be a wonder of beauty. Usually the outside of a Japanese
15 VIII | compositions more elaborate and usually much longer than the dodoitsu,
16 VIII | Love in suspense is not usually inclined to reverence.~p.
17 VIII(3)| the Mountain of Swords is usually depicted in Buddhist {footnote
18 VIII(3)| moon-night crows." Crows usually announce the dawn by their
19 IX | progressive stages (five usually), to be studied in succession,
20 X(2) | the dead in large jars, - usually of red earthenware, {footnote
21 X(1) | The bodiless spirit is usually said to rest upon the roof
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