to the south | France is to the south of England. |
to the south | I went to the South Pacific for a summer of romantic adventure. |
to the south | My house faces to the south. |
to the south | My house looks to the south. |
to the south | The birds flew to the south. |
to the south | The drift of the current is to the south. |
to the south | The island is to the south of Japan. |
to the south | The object flew away to the south, giving out flashes of light. |
to the south | The plant ranges from the north of Europe to the south. |
to the south | The road tends to the south at the next village. |
to the south | These windows look to the south. |
to the south | Those birds build their nests in the summer and fly to the south in the winter. |
南蛮 | [なんばん, nanban] (n) (1) (arch) (derog) southern barbarians (formerly used by the Chinese to refer to non-ethnic Chinese to the south); (2) (arch) South-East Asia; (3) (arch) (See 紅毛・2) Western Europe (esp. Spain and Portugal, their South-East Asian colonies, and their goods and people arriving in Japan via the colonies); (pref) (4) exotic (esp. Western European or South-East Asian style); (n) (5) (usu.ナンバ) (in dance, puppetry, etc.) thrusting the right foot and right arm forward at the same time (or left foot and left arm); (6) (abbr) (See 南蛮煮・なんばんに・2) food prepared using chili peppers or Welsh onions; (P) [Add to Longdo] |