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Yume Nikki:The Thing with the Quivering Jaw(name)

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw(Yama)
















White Desert(鉄囲山)

White Desert (Naraka (Buddhism))

1 構成

須弥山世界(仏教における、人間界を含む宇宙の全て)の一番外側を輪のように取り囲む鉄囲山(てっちせん)は内と外の二重構造であり、その間に地獄や閻魔王宮があるとしている。

鉄囲山 (The mountain of the iron to enclose) in the 須弥山世界 (all the universes in Buddhism including a human community) which encloses the outside like a ring most is the dual structure of inside and outside, and supposes that there are hell and a Yama king's palace between them.

White Desert's Mountain(鉄囲山) The Thing with the Quivering Jaw(Yama)?

つまり、現在の通説である地獄=地下世界とは異なり、いわゆる「世界の果て」にあるとしているのだ。

That is, unlike the hell = underground world which is the present accepted theory, it is supposed that it is in what is called "an end in the world."

Hell (八熱地獄 is underground world hell) and White Desert  (長阿含経 is end in the world hell)

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw (Crocodilia)

Teeth and jaws of Crocodilia

2 Description


Teeth and jaws

All crocodilians have thecodont dentition (teeth set in bony sockets), but unlike mammals, they replace their teeth throughout life (though not in extreme old age). Juvenile crocodilians replace teeth with larger ones at a rate as high as one new tooth per socket every month. After reaching adult size in a few years, however, tooth replacement rates can slow to two years and even longer. Very old members of some species have been seen in an almost "edentulous" (toothless) state, after teeth have been broken and replacement slowed or ceased. As a result, a single crocodile can go through at least 3,000 teeth in its lifetime. Each tooth is hollow, and the new one grows inside the old. In this way, a new tooth is ready once the old is lost.

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw(Crocodilia)

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw (Chest hair)

1 Development and growth

Although vellus hair is already present in the area in childhood, chest hair is the terminal hair that develops as an effect of rising levels of androgens (primarily testosterone and its derivatives) due to puberty. Different from the head hair it is therefore a secondary sexual characteristic. Men tend to be covered with far more terminal hair, particularly on the chest, the abdomen, and the face.

Growth and Patterns of Chest Hair

The development of chest hair begins normally during late puberty, usually between the ages of 15 and 18. It can also start later, between the age of 20 and 30, so that many men in their twenties have not yet reached their full chest hair development. The growth continues subsequently.

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw (Chest hair) is "Men tend to be covered with far more terminal hair" and "usually between the ages of 15 and 18. It can also start later, between the age of 20 and 30"

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw (Tears)

The tear system

 Main article: List of eye diseases and disordersQuality of vision is affected by the stability of the tear film.[5]

"Crocodile tears syndrome" is an uncommon consequence of nerve regeneration subsequent to Bell's palsy or other damage to the facial nerve in which efferent fibers from the superior salivary nucleus become improperly connected to nerve axons projecting to the lacrimal glands, causing one to shed tears (lacrimate) during salivation while smelling foods or eating. It is presumed that one would also salivate while crying due to the inverse improper connection of the lacrimal nucleus to the salivary glands, but this would be less noticeable.[6]

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw (Crocodile tears)

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw(Tears)

Crocodile tears (or superficial sympathy) are a false or insincere display of emotion such as a hypocrite crying fake tears of grief. The phrase gives its name to Bogorad's syndrome, colloquially "crocodile tears syndrome", an uncommon consequence of recovery from Bell's palsy where faulty regeneration of the facial nerve causes sufferers to shed tears while eating.[citation needed]


1 History and usage

The expression comes from an ancient anecdote that crocodiles weep in order to lure their prey, or that they cry for the victims they are eating.[citation needed] The earliest known version of the anecdote is found in Bibliotheca by Photios,[1] then in a number of bestiaries such as De bestiis et aliis rebus. This tale was first spread widely in English in the stories of the travels of Sir John Mandeville in the 14th century.[2]


※the "prey(Madotsuki?)" in the "crocodiles(The Thing with the Quivering Jaw?) weep in order to lure their prey, "

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw (怒りマーク)

怒りマーク(いかりマーク)とは、漫画アニメの慣用表現(『漫符』)の一つで、怒筋(どすじ)ともいい、キャラクターの額や拳の上などに描かれる、十字型やY字型に配置された曲線によって表した記号のことである。

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw(Square Shoulders)

このマークはもともと浮き出た血管青筋)からデフォルメされて生まれた。主には、4本の曲線で表された「十字型」と、3本の曲線で表された「Y字型」があり、作者によって使い分けられている(両方を用いる場合もある)。なお、描かれる場所は実際に血管が存在する場所に限らず、怒りの度合いや表現の仕方に応じて怒っているキャラクターの近くの空間といった決して血管が存在しない場所にも描かれることもある。頭を無視して頭の上に「ドカッ!」と大きく描く漫画家もいるほか、力の入れ具合で力の入っているところに描く漫画家もいる。

3 符号位置

記号 Unicode JIS X 0213 文字参照 名称
💢 U+1F4A2 💢💢 ANGER SIGN

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw (怒り肩)

読み方いかりがた

いかり肩 とも書く

文法情報 名詞
対訳

square shoulders

怒りマーク(anger sign) + 怒り肩(Square shoulders) to "怒り肩(Anger shoulders)"? 

提供 EDRDG
URL http://www.edrdg.org/

The Thing with the Quivering Jaw (Square shoulders)

square your shoulders

to show determination and a lack of fear When the judge asked her if she was guilty or not guilty, she squared her shoulders, looked the judge in the eye, and said, “Not guilty.”

See also: shoulder, square

Cambridge Dictionary of American Idioms Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2003. Reproduced with permission.