Chitcha Seppen. Tiny Snowflake.
The author is Masaru Emoto and the books is called 'The Hidden Messages in Water.'
The address of the Snowflake-Taylor Public Library is: 418 South 4Th West, Snowflake, 85937 5549
Snowflake Bentley discovered no two snowflakes are alike.
A compound has a fixed chemical composition, and snowflake is ice = water = H2O.
There are many places where one can purchase a Swarvoski crystal snowflake. One can purchase a Swarvoski crystal snowflake at popular on the web sources such as Sterling Collectibles and Amazon.
The regular ordinary Japanese person's word for snowflake is "seppen." But Japanese poets and writers use the term "yuki no hana" which literally means "snowflower" -- a prettier, more poetic word for the beautiful snowflake.
スノーフレーク-like this!
I think a snowflake got the snow part because it was made from snow. I think a snowflake got the flake part because it's so tiny. You would need a humongeous magnifying glass to see all the little tiny points.
I think a snowflake got the snow part because it was made from snow. I think a snowflake got the flake part because it's so tiny. You would need a humongeous magnifying glass to see all the little tiny points.
Yuki no furēku
Yuki no furēku
Could be Crystal, snowflakes are tiny ice crystals.
The author is Masaru Emoto and the books is called 'The Hidden Messages in Water.'
It means 'tiny.'
Hello = konichiwa Tiny = chitcha Small = chibi, chisai
Snowflake
cuz Japanese guys have very teeny tiny stuff