Entries Tagged as 'Real World'

Today is White Day

White Day (ホワイトデー, howaito dē?, a Japanese pseudo-anglicism; Korean: 화이트데이 Hwaiteudei; Chinese: 白色情人節) is a holiday created in Japan (1980) in response to the holiday exactly one month ago, which is Valentines Day. It is celebrated on March 14. Japan, South Korea and Taiwan observe this holiday.

In Japan, Valentine’s Day is observed by members of the female gender who present chocolate gifts (either store-bought or handmade), usually to a member of the male gender, as an expression of love. On White Day, men who received a honmei-choco chocolate on Valentine’s Day are expected to return the favor by giving gifts, usually more expensive. Sometimes the term sanbai kaeshi (三倍返し, sanbai kaeshi? literally, “thrice the return”) is used to describe the generally recited rule that the return gift should be two- to three-times the cost of the Valentine’s gift.

There are many theories about the origins of White Day. According to one, the holiday began in 1965 when a marshmallow maker started marketing to men on the grounds that they should pay back the women who gave them chocolate and other gifts with marshmallows. [wiki]

I notice this tradition in some anime/j-dorama videos I watch. I wonder why most of the males try hard not to get a gift from a girl. Then I realized that, it is because, if they receive (specially if they are popular) too many gifts from the opposite gender, they will end up repaying all of them on White Day.

Reduced hearing caused by portable mp3 players

In the next couple of years, most people will be deaf. Reason: portable mp3 players. As soon as I step inside a bus, jeepney, or the train, there’s always at least one or two person with earphones stuck inside their ear. The worst thing is that I can hear what they are listening to. That being said, loud music can definitely affect a person’s sense of hearing in a long term.

That’s one of the reason I reduced my usage of earphones. The last time I remember using it the longest time was when I visited my province at Bicol. The overnight trip was around 6 hours. And my mp3 player playing the whole night, till the next morning. And yes, the battery on my player did last that long. I started playing it before the bus left, then stopped it after we arrived at the terminal. It was playing all the time while I was sleeping.

Now, I already gave that mp3/mp4 player to my girlfriend, including the earphones. I still have a portable mp3 player, and I call it P990i. But I use the built-in speaker when I’m listening to music or watching videos. But there are still times that I use the included earphones, so that I won’t disturb others when I’m in a public place.

One last thing. If you are listening to your portable mp3/mp4 players (iPOd, Zen, Zune, etc) make sure you don’t use the earphones for an extended period of time. Buy a portable speaker, or if you are at home, you can plug it directly to your speakers.

uruudoshi, leap year 2008

Every four years, an added day on February appears. When there’s a 29th day on February, the year is called a leap year.

A leap year (or intercalary year) is a year containing one or more extra days (or, in case of lunisolar calendars, an extra month) in order to keep the calendar year synchronised with the astronomical or seasonal year.

A person born on February 29 may be called a “leapling“. In common years they usually celebrate their birthdays on 28 February or 1 March. For legal purposes, their legal birthdays depend on how different laws count time intervals. In some situations, March 1 is used as the birthday in a non-leap year since it then is the day just after February 28.

In Japanese, leap year translates to the word uruudoshi.

Uruudoshi is composed of 閏(uruu)+年(toshi)=year. The kanji “uruu” is structured of two kanji 門(mon)=gate and 王(ou)=king, it ’s an deogram. [In leap year the king would stay inside the gate, never go out, it's not regular thing.] That is to say “urudoshi” has the meaning of an irregular year.

In short.

uruu = leap
doshi = toshi = year

‘uruu bi’ = leap day (=bi)
‘uruu byou’ = leap second (=byou)
‘uruu zuki’ = leap year’s feb.

Sources: Wiki, Yahoo! Answers

Nurse Licensure Examination test results (February 21, 2008)

Every time there’s an exam result coming up regarding Nurses (Nursing), my mom and my other relatives, always reminds me to look for the results on the Internet. I’ve already subscribed the exam result page at Inquirer to my feed reader, but I think it’s not updating properly. Anyway, if you are having trouble finding the results, here are the links to get you started.

All the exam results can be found at http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/examresults/. Everything is there, from Aeronautical Engineering to Midwife, from Nurse to Veterinarian.

The Nursing Board Exam Results for December 2007 was released just today, February 21, 2008. You can view it at http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/examresults/NURSE/20080221/

NURSE LICENSURE EXAMINATION - RETAKERS AS PER C.A. DECISION can be found at
/NURSE_LICENSURE_EXAMINATION_-_RETAKERS_AS_PER_C.A._DECISION/20080221/

NURSE LICENSURE EXAMINATION - RETAKERS FOR C.G.F.N.S. is at
/NURSE_LICENSURE_EXAMINATION_-_RETAKERS_FOR_C.G.F.N.S./20080221/

Unlike last year, they didn’t released the PDF format with contains the whole list of names, instead they broke down the names by letters of the surnames. So if you are looking for your name click on the first letter of your surname. I guess they did that so the page load on a single page will not be heavy, but right now I’m having errors accessing some of their page.

UPDATE: I found out after I posted this, that there are some pages in Inquirer that are not linked properly. So If you are having trouble going to a certain page (because it is crashing due to server load), you can visit other sites for the results list.
Nursing Board Exam Results for December 2007
PRC Nursing Board Exam Results for December 2007 PDF

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Happy Valentines

It’s the day of hearts, roses, chocolates, cupids, and sex. Happy Valentines.

Belldandy (Ah! My Goddess)

Tohsaka Rin and Saber (Fate/Stay Night)

Kinomoto Sakura, Daidōji Tomoyo, and Keroberos (Card Captor Sakura)

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