KAWA
A very kind waitress taught my friend Miguel and I how to make origami! |
I loved Kyoto. It is a very traditional city as it is the center of Japanese culture and of Buddhism in Japan. This is where all Japanese people travel to in order to learn about their traditional culture, with almost a third of the entire Japanese population visiting there annually.
Kyoto is also the city where the oldest people in the world reside, where there are people over 110 years old.
There are also a number of universities in Kyoto. I found this mix of really old traditional people and a lot of college students to be very interesting. Along with the presence of many universities is the presence of many college students from all over the world studying abroad here. I met people from all over including Canada, Austria, Switzerland, France, Finland, Mexico, Venezuela, Singapore, China, Sweden, Australia and more.
Awesome nights hanging out at the Kamogawa with my friends Una from China and David from Mexico |
I met most of them at the KAWA (Kamogawa river)! =) Kawa means river in Japanese. In Kyoto, most young people at night will buy drinks from a nearby convenience store and then head to the Kamogawa and just sit with their friends on the river bank and drink, talk, and be silly. This is where I made lots of new friends in Kyoto! Including this one Venezuelan guy named Jorge Eduardo, who had been living in Japan for over 9 years and spoke perfect Japanese. This guy was hilarious! He had a very latin, friendly personality which I think amuses the Japanese a lot hahaha...
He called our nightly visits to the kawa, "kawagando" (this joke may only make sense if you know some Spanish, sorry about that!).
"Vamos a kawagar!" - Jorge Eduardo Padrón
Now for the Kanji!
川
Kunyomi: かわ - "kawa"
Onyomi: セン - "sen"
Meaning: river, stream
Jōyō Kanji taught in grade 1
JLPT level N5
181 of 2500 most common used kanji in newspapers.
Kunyomi: かわ - "kawa"
Onyomi: セン - "sen"
Meaning: river, stream
Jōyō Kanji taught in grade 1
JLPT level N5
181 of 2500 most common used kanji in newspapers.
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