Cool. To be perfectly honest, I don't think most nations have basements in their houses. The modern-day basement seems to be an American thing (or maybe I just feel that way 'cause I'm an American), and it seems like the idea is popular in countries which share heavy cultural ties with America (Canada, the UK, etc).Fact of the week:
most Japanese houses do not have basements.
Heck, there's not much different from a house falling down on you compared to a house falling into the basement anyways.
Certainly the vast majority of Japan-made Japanese cars (Honda, Toyota, Mazda, etc), and many of the more recent imports. But there are a lot of older cars (particularly non-Japanese imports) that were manufactured for Japan but that don't have the reverse beep. Not much older, mind you; about mid-90's to early 00's models.Nearly all Japanese vehicles and those imported into Japan have two main safety features to remind the driver what they are doing.
1) When reversing, inside of the car will be a beeping sound to 'remind' the driver. This is similar to those installed in trucks back in North America and Europe however the beeping is inside the car, not outside.
In order to buy a car in Japan, you must have a parking spot. No parking spot registered to you? Then you can't buy a car!
make sure people don't start parking on the sidewalks like in China.
Along this line, there are some cities where kei-cars (cars with tiny 660cc engines) are exempt from parking registration. Which is also partly why you see so many kei-cars (identified by their yellow license plates).It's an attempt to cut down on the amount of personal fossils fuels
Troll said:* They are so desperate for any excuse to have a day off that if a national holiday lands on a sunday they'll make monday free
I take it you are reading wikipedia? The Den En Toshi/Hanzomon line has been my home line for the past six years and yes they do have woman-only trains. *Thanks for trying though.Troll said:* While the scourge of women-only cars is widespread, there's still plenty of lines without that are packed during rush hour. Like the Tokyu Den-en-toshi and Chuo lines
There's plenty of schoolgirls in uniforms to look at without needing to go for the underage children.Hey, how about we don't turn this into "How to r*** and molest underage children" ok?
Golden week is a holiday _week_, not a day. Try things like 体育の日.How do you explain our screwed up schedule for Golden Week? For those ho don't know, Golden Week is April 27 to May 6. Yea... Thursday. Having us splinter out week into a segment and still needing to deal with work.
Perhaps better to say they don't all _use_ the woman-only cars. And the cars themselves are only serving that purpose from around 0700-0845 or so.I take it you are reading wikipedia? The Den En Toshi/Hanzomon line has been my home line for the past six years and yes they do have woman-only trains. *Thanks for trying though.