Waka may refer to:

Contents

Places [link]

Organizations or companies [link]

People [link]

Other [link]

  • Huaca or wak'a, in the Quechua language, a class of sacred objects
  • Waka/Jawaka, a 1972 album by Frank Zappa
  • Cyclone Waka, a severe tropical cyclone which formed to the northwest of Samoa on December 29, 2001
  • A fictional character in the video game Ōkami
  • Waka is a proposed pronunciation for angle brackets

See also [link]


https://wn.com/Waka

Waka (poetry)

Waka (和歌, literally, "Japanese poem") is a type of poetry in classical Japanese literature. Waka are composed in Japanese, and are contrasted with poetry composed by Japanese poets in Classical Chinese, which are known as kanshi. Although waka in modern Japanese is written as 和歌, in the past it was also written as 倭歌 (see Wa (Japan)), and a variant name is yamato-uta (大和歌).

Etymology

The word waka has two different but related meanings: the original meaning was "poetry in Japanese" and encompassed several genres such as chōka and sedōka (discussed below); the later, more common definition refers to poetry in a 5-7-5-7-7 metre. Up to and during the compilation of the Man'yōshū in the eighth century, the word waka was a general term for poetry composed in Japanese, and included several genres such as tanka (短歌, "short poem"), chōka (長歌, "long poem"), bussokusekika (仏足石歌, "Buddha footprint poem") and sedōka (旋頭歌, "repeating-the-first-part poem"). However, by the time of the Kokinshū's compilation at the beginning of the tenth century, all of these forms except for the tanka and chōka had effectively gone extinct, and chōka had significantly diminished in prominence. As a result, the word waka became effectively synonymous with tanka, and the word tanka fell out of use until it was revived at the end of the nineteenth century (see Tanka).

Waka Inoue

Waka Inoue (井上 和香 Inoue Waka, born May 13, 1980) is a Japanese idol, tarento and actress. She was born in Meguro, Tokyo as Naoko Niimura (新村 直子). Her mother is former actress Kyoko Saga.

Waka's main claim to fame in the tarento circles is her bustline. Although she moved away from bikini modeling as her primary work in 2006, she has continued to pose for annual calendars through 2010.

She also worked as a female guest announcer/interviewer for K-1 in 2006, after replacing Norika Fujiwara.

Trivia

In episode 488: The Devil of the TV Station, of the Detective Conan anime she played herself

References

External links

  • Waka Inoue official page (Japanese)
  • Waka's feeling Official blog (Japanese)

  • Cartel (Cartel album)

    Cartel is the second studio album American rock band Cartel. It released in stores on August 21, 2007 despite being announced by the band's lead singer as coming out on July 24, 2007. It was officially completed at sometime around 8:00 p.m. on June 10, 2007 and features "Lose It" as the first single.

    The Bubble

    The album was completed in 20 days inside a giant glass bubble as part of the Band in a Bubble program sponsored by Dr Pepper, MTV and KFC. The band was forced to live inside the bubble for 20 days without being able to leave. The first single, "Lose It", was performed from the bubble live on June 1 for TRL's Spankin' New Music Week. Throughout the recording of the album, the band was watched constantly by fans through 23 webcams that were positioned all through the bubble. The album was finished two days before the set time and was completed with 13 songs. The album was performed by Cartel after they left the bubble on June 12, 2007 at 8:00 p.m.

    Reception

    The album received mixed reviews by critics.

    Cartel (ship)

    Cartel ships, in international law in the 18th and the 19th centuries, were ships employed on humanitarian voyages, in particular, to carry prisoners for exchange between places agreed upon in the terms of the exchange. While serving as a cartel, a ship was not subject to capture. However, if it engaged in commerce or warlike acts such as carrying official dispatches or messengers, it lost its character of inviolability and would then be subject to capture. The cartel protection extended to the return voyage. Furthermore, the prisoners being taken for exchange were under an obligation not to engage in hostilities towards their captors. If they were to capture the cartel ship, they would have no rights to salvage, and the owner of the vessel, if it were a ship from their country, would have no right to reclaim the vessel.

    During the War of 1812 the British Admiralty wrote to the United States Government that Great Britain would not accept as valid, cartel agreements made on the high seas. On 10 June 1813, USS President captured the outward-bound Falmouth packet Duke of Montrose, Captain Aaron Groub Blewett, which managed to throw her mails overboard before President could send a prize crew aboard. President made a cartel of Duke of Montrose, putting all of President's prisoners from three earlier captures, on board and then sending her and her now 79 passengers and crew into Falmouth under the command of an American officer. There the British government refused to recognize the cartel agreement that Blewett, his crew, and passengers had signed. Rather than turn Duke of Montrose over to the Agent for American Prisoners, the British government instructed Blewett to resume command of his ship and prepare her to sail again.

    Kartel (electoral alliance)

    A kartel is the Dutch term for an electoral alliance between two or more parties in Belgium.

    In a system of proportional representation in which the country is divided in multiple electoral districts, such as Belgium the threshold to obtain one seat can be very high (5% of votes since 2003), which also favours larger parties. Therefore some parties pool their voters in order to gain more (or any) seats.

    The SP.A-Spirit cartel between the Socialist Party - Different (SP.A) and the left-liberal Spirit (later FlemishProgressives, then Social-Liberal Party) is an example of such a cartel.

    Vlaams Kartels in Brussels

    On several occasions some or all Flemish parties bundled forces on 'Vlaams Kartel' lists for municipal elections in Brussels (in Dutch Vlaams Kartel), sometimes getting together one or two seats in the municipal council, sometimes getting none. As these parties are minority parties in every Brussels municipality, i.e., the parties of an ethnic or linguistic minority (on the average 10-15% of the population), this is a case of an electoral coalition of ethnic parties.

    Call

    Call may refer to:

    In arts and entertainment

  • Call (band), from Lahore, Pakistan
  • "Call / I4U", a 2011 single by Japanese music group AAA
  • A type of betting in poker
  • A bid, pass, double, or redouble in the bidding stage of contract bridge
  • In science and technology

    Computing

  • System call, in computer science, the mechanism used by an application program to request service from the operating system or another application program
  • Computer-assisted language learning, a concept in language education
  • A shell command in DOS, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows command-line interpreters
  • A method of starting a subroutine
  • Telecommunications

  • Telephone call
  • Call origination, in telephony
  • An attempt to set up a telecommunication circuit
  • In teletraffic engineering, a unit of traffic measurement
  • Other uses in science and technology

  • Animal communication, a song or noise made by an animal such as:
  • Bird call, part of a bird song
  • In finance

  • Call option, a term in stock trading
  • Call on shares, a request for a further payment on partly paid share capital
  • Podcasts:

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