Top 10 similar words or synonyms for tamaoki

hashizume    0.905540

ohmoto    0.902363

ohtani    0.901652

kuwano    0.901374

egashira    0.900721

hirashima    0.900295

ohishi    0.900091

ogita    0.899109

iwahashi    0.896638

obinata    0.896272

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for tamaoki

Article Example
Juniti Saito Born in the city of Pompeia, São Paulo, is the son of Iwataro Saito and Toshike Tamaoki
Rail transport in Okinawa In the Meiji period, Minamidaitōjima was uninhabited, but in 1900, Tamaoki Shokai began to develop the island, and started both the sugar refinery and the handcar railway in 1902. In 1917 the commercial rights passed to Toyo Sugar Refining. The railway was converted to a gauge of 762 mm and began seriously hauling sugar cane. In 1927, Toyo merged with Dainippon Sugar Refining.
Kitadaitōjima The island remained uninhabited until claimed by the Empire of Japan in 1885. In 1900, a team of pioneers from Hachijōjima, an island located south of Tokyo led by Tamaoki Han'emon (1838 – 1910), who had pioneered settlement on Minamidaitōjima, became the first human inhabitants of the island, and started the cultivation of sugar cane from 1903.
Oribe ware Artists specializing in Oribe ware include Yasuo Tamaoki (b. 1941) and Osamu Suzuki (b. 1934; 鈴木藏), who was designated a Living National Treasure in 1994. Suzuki Goro (b. 1941; 鈴木五郎) is a modern artist who works in Oribe ware amongst others, as well as Shigeru Koyama. The Museum of Furuta Oribe in Kyoto opened in 2014 and exhibits a number of Oribe ware.
Daitō Islands The islands remained uninhabited until formally claimed by the Empire of Japan in 1885. In 1900, a team of pioneers from Hachijōjima, one of the Izu Islands located south of Tokyo led by Tamaoki Han'emon (1838 – 1910), started a settlement on Minamidaitōjima, and began cultivating sugar cane. He subsequently led colonization efforts on Kitadaitōjima and Okidaitōjima. Those two islands had substantial deposits of guano, which was mined for phosphate-based fertilizer and gunpowder. By 1919 the population was more than 4000 people.