Japanese Beaver

Japanese Beaver




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Japanese Beaver
A beaver is a furry animal with a big flat tail and large teeth. Beavers use their teeth to cut wood and build dams in rivers.
...a coat with a huge beaver collar. ビーバーの毛皮でできた大きな襟付きのコート
Copyright © 2021 by HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved.
A beaver is a furry animal like a large rat with a big flat tail.

Translation of beaver from the Collins English to Japanese

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Aki Nakimura, from Tachikawa, Japan, spends much of his time in Tokyo working for a small book shop in Shinjiku. It could be his interest in news or his lack of work ethic but he spends a lot of time reading various newspapers and magazines at work. He is nice enough to share and publish articles that he finds weird enough to pass on.
Latest posts by Aki Nakimura ( see all )
Japan, known for holding the record on the World’s Largest Orgy , is one of the most sexually aware countries around. So it was of little surprise when we learned that the newest hip shop, that all the girls love in Shibuya, Tokyo, was named “Beaver”
Thats right… Japanese girls love Beaver. So the next time your in Shibuya, check out Japan’s Beaver and don’t be surprised by the customary greeting of “Irashaimase” as it only means “Welcome to our Beaver!”
Doesn’t everyone love beavers? They are so cute, with those big tails and teeth…. and those amazing dams that they build……
yeah, this is the correct meaning of beavers. Japanese can also be cute, and are always building stuff. But I wonder about the comment "most aware" as some J-beavers, perhaps many, are unclipped and contributing to the reforestation project, au natural! PH balance can also be an issue with some, questioning the awareness mentioned.
i don’t think that’s what “beavers” mean…. (O_O)
Perhaps they do mean “beaver”,as in the animal,and not the slang, that some depraved morons are thinking!
greeting of “Irashaimasen” as it only means “Welcome to our Beaver!”
Actually it only means welcome, they say it everywhere. Not particularly in ‘Beaver’-shop!!
wonder if they have soom nice clothings there.
“irasshaimase” is what the staff say, “irasshaimasen” is negative.
And they are building a men’s store nearby call “Wally”…
Whats next camel toe…fish taco…roast beef sandwhich
For a take on the subject of Japanese girls and the dual meanings of “beaver” and (corresponding humor and embarassment), see the new post at site about my Japanese wife: http://www.norikostale.wordpress.com Jim
I just went to this store and it has awesome stuff…I didn't notate any wierdness because of the name! It's a bohemian, earthy type store so i figured that's why they called it Beaver?
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Bob Strauss is a science writer and the author of several books, including "The Big Book of What, How and Why" and "A Field Guide to the Dinosaurs of North America."


Strauss, Bob. "Giant Beaver (Castoroides)." ThoughtCo, Aug. 28, 2020, thoughtco.com/giant-beaver-castoroides-1093211.
Strauss, Bob. (2020, August 28). Giant Beaver (Castoroides). Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/giant-beaver-castoroides-1093211
Strauss, Bob. "Giant Beaver (Castoroides)." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/giant-beaver-castoroides-1093211 (accessed May 26, 2022).

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Steven G. Johnson / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 3.0

Name: Giant Beaver; also known as Castoroides (Greek for "of the beaver family"); pronounced CASS-tore-OY-deez


Habitat: Woodlands of North America


Historical Epoch: Late Pliocene-Modern (3 million-10,000 years ago)


Size and Weight: About eight feet long and 200 pounds


Distinguishing Characteristics: Large size; narrow tail; six-inch-long incisors


It sounds like the punchline to a prehistoric joke: an eight-foot-long, 200-pound beaver with six-inch-long incisors, a narrow tail, and long, shaggy hair. But Castoroides, also known as the Giant Beaver, really existed, and it fit right in with the other plus-sized megafauna of its late Pliocene and Pleistocene ecosystem. Like modern beavers, the Giant Beaver probably led a partially aquatic lifestyle--especially since it was too big and bulky to move about sleekly on land, where it would have made a tasty meal for a hungry Saber-Tooth Tiger . (By the way, other than both being mammals, the Giant Beaver was completely unrelated to the beaver-like Castorocauda, which lived during the late Jurassic period.)


The question everyone asks is: did the Giant Beaver build equally giant dams? Sadly, if it did, no evidence of these gigantic construction projects has been preserved into modern times, though some enthusiasts point to a four-foot-high dam in Ohio (which may well have been made by another animal, or be a natural formation). Like the other mammalian megafauna of the last Ice Age, the extinction of the Giant Beaver was hastened by the early human settlers of North America, who may have valued this shaggy beast for its fur as well as its meat.





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