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What kind of letter is "oshite letter?"

A logo of "aoao" is a slightly mysterious design. In fact, it is the design which I took out of this "oshite letter".
I comment on "oshite letter" said to have been used in Jomon period.

With "oshite letter"

Call the letter used in ancient Japan before a kanji comes from China with "ancient Japanese characters" (kamiyomoji/jindaimoji), and there seems to be some type. One as for "the oshite letter" of those. It is thought that it was used from Jomon period and the documents are left, but have not been determined whether it is genuine yet, and the truth is discussed from the Edo era.
According to the lower table, "the oshite letter" has five vowel sounds and 10 consonants and looks just like a i u e o list. A sound has a meaning each, and a character seems to be made with the combination of vowel sound and consonant. By "oshite letter", can you write your name?

Logo mark of aoao

The logo of aoao is already readable if I look at the face of the upper "oshite letter". In fact, the mysterious logo such as the sign was a letter!
By the way, the name that crossed "I meet" to be able to meet "the blue" that the whirlpool was empty in "aoao" and many customers. It is the name that I made with a request to be used to a hotel healing all of you with the sky and the sea and a smile of the staff.
▶The detailed concept is this

Birth of Japan from Awajishima

I can connect to the story of ancient Japanese characters and introduce the story (Japanese myth) of Kojiro as it is interesting♪
Do you know "Kojiki" (beggar)? There are not the Japanese Islands yet, and, with a book considered to be the Japanese oldest history book, God begins from a story to make the island ("the Old Testament" for Japan).
It is written down how an island of Japan was made like a bottom.
When Japan was made from Awajishima and Shikoku, it is slightly unexpected.
"The onogoro island" enacted very first seems to write "jikorishima" in a kanji. This seems to be because it is the island where a drop of the seawater which fell from the spearhead hardens with nature and salt, and there was it (the "island that solidified naturally" → "onogoro island"). There is a theory in various ways, but existence wants to strain Nushima (nushima) close to Awajishima whether you exist whether this island is an aerial island.
There are a lot of "i*dakushinkyu" (izanagijinguu) and "onokoro shimashinsha" others, tourist attractions around the origin in Japan in Awajishima. Sightseeing in Awajishima becomes more interesting if I read a story made with a country!

Country of Naruto and Awajishima and Awa

What is the origin of the place name of "Naruto"?
A whirling current (whirling current) is like an origin somehow. As there were the straits where a whirling current and a tide resounded by a roaring sound, it seemed to come to be called "null (mei) to" (the straits).
It is rare worldwide so as that the speed of the tide of Naruto Channel is not just number one in Japan and is cited in three major tides of the world (as for two others Messina Strait/Italy, Seymour straits/Canada). This intense tide produces the phenomena called the whirling current. The popular whirling current and tide are must-see if they visit the whirlpool!
Is "Awaji" connected with "Awa?"
The origin of the place name of "Awaji" is famous for the theory with "paths of way = Awa to Awa" (Awaji). But it becomes dated it and seems reverse in after of the country of Awa as Awajishima was made earlier if I stand on Kojiki when it is "paths of Awa". When Awajishima sees this with Kojiki by the name of "*dokorehokoresabetsushima" (awajinohonosawakeshima), it does not seem to be "*" = "Awa".
By the way, this is because a foxtail millet (grains of bubble/Gramineae) was made, and the origin of old name "Awa" of Tokushima seems to be written down in Kojiki with "a foxtail millet country". It was the Nara era of 713 years and seemed to change the notation of "the foxtail millet" to "Awa". Then, after all, I feel that "*" and "the foxtail millet" of Awaji might be with different meanings (by the way, it seems to be 712 years that Kojiki was completed).
Then, "*" and "the foxtail millet" think whether a sound of ❝ bubble ❞ turned into the meaning of "*do" (way) = "paths of Awa" as jidakede, the times date back by chance. How does everybody think?
If a mystery of the place name is good, question everybody!
Onaruto Bridge which connects Awa (Tokushima) and Awajishima
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