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Hiroshima English

Meaning Hiroshima meaning

What does Hiroshima mean?

Hiroshima

a port city on the southwestern coast of Honshu in Japan; on August 6, 1945 Hiroshima was almost completely destroyed by the first atomic bomb dropped on a populated area

Synonyms Hiroshima synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Hiroshima?

Hiroshima English » English

Japan

Examples Hiroshima examples

How do I use Hiroshima in a sentence?

Simple sentences

The devil destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The atomic bomb destroyed the entire city of Hiroshima.
I was born in Hiroshima in 1945.
I have never been to Hiroshima.
They dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
She likes Hiroshima better than any other city.
There's a place called Kuchiwa in Hiroshima.
She lived in Hiroshima until she was ten.
Thousands of homes were without clean water and electricity in the city of Hiroshima and other hard-hit areas.
Seiji Toda told Japan's TBS television he was shocked and felt helpless when he saw that his restaurant in Hiroshima had been destroyed by a landslide.
An atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima in 1945.
I am from Hiroshima, but now I live in Tokyo.
I go to Hiroshima three times a month.
She had lived in Hiroshima until she was ten.
In the year 1945 the atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.
How many innocent civilians were killed in Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
The USA dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima in 1945.

Movie subtitles

Fukushima, Kouchi, Hiroshima.
Say, you were at Hiroshima, weren't you, Dad?
The other day I saw a report on the bomb damage in Hiroshima.
You saw nothing in Hiroshima.
The hospital in Hiroshima exists.
You didn't see the hospital in Hiroshima.
What museum in Hiroshima?
Four times at the museum in Hiroshima.
Anonymous masses of hair that the women of Hiroshima, upon waking in the morning, would find had fallen out.
I've always wept over Hiroshima's fate.
Hiroshima was covered in flowers.
Just as the illusion exists in love, the illusion you can never forget, so I was under the illusion I would never forget Hiroshima.
I saw the survivors too, and those who were in the wombs of the women of Hiroshima.
Your adventure was. Hiroshima. His is the flight to Venus.
And because my mother was killed by the Hiroshima bomb.
Everything was decided for me by the Hiroshima bomb.
Hiroshima.
With the discovery of chain reaction the Americans dropped a bomb on Hiroshima.
You were a retainer of the former Fukushima Clan in Hiroshima?
You say you were a retainer of the former Fukushima Clan in Hiroshima?
I served the former Lord Masanori Fukushima of Hiroshima.
My name is Motome Chijiiwa, a ronin from Hiroshima.
This ronin from Hiroshima, Master Hanshiro Tsugumo, is to be granted use of the courtyard to perform harakiri.
The ronin from Hiroshima named Motome Chijiiwa was a man of some acquaintance to me.
The ronin from Hiroshima. Hanshiro Tsugumo, committed harakiri.
I omit Hiroshima and Nagasaki, since those actions belong more properly to World War III than World War II.
Their only mistake was that they failed to finish us at the start and they paid for that mistake at Hiroshima.
But after Hiroshima, the magazines ran pictures. It looks the same.
I'm going to Hiroshima.
You'll be in Hiroshima before sunset.
To Hiroshima.
This is Hiroshima.
How many orphans are there in Hiroshima now?
But we have about 500-600 in 6 Hiroshima facilities.
Hiroshima station.

News and current affairs

Just this year, a 10-year-old ban on the research and development of nuclear weapons below five kilotons--the bomb at Hiroshima was 15 kilotons--was eliminated.
There are roughly 23,000 nuclear weapons today, which is 40,000 fewer than at the Cold War's height. These weapons' total yield is greater than 150,000 Hiroshima-size nuclear explosions.
But it must not take another Hiroshima or Nagasaki - or an even greater disaster - before they finally wake up and recognize the urgent necessity of nuclear disarmament.
Japan's barbaric conduct during WWII--and the Allies' nuclear retaliation at Hiroshima and Nagasaki--laid the foundation for the US-imposed pacifism that has reigned since the war's end.
But is there really a clear moral distinction between killing roughly 100,000 people in Hiroshima with one atom bomb and killing even more people in Tokyo in a single night of incendiary bombing?
True, nobody has been killed by a nuclear weapon since the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 65 years ago this month.
The current stockpile of nuclear weapons represents more than a million times the explosive power of the bomb whose destruction of Hiroshima so grieved him.
The reality is that defense debates within Japan are invariably traumatic, based on sharp memories of the war and the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Each anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki reminds us that memory is not morally neutral.
For example, in 1995 the Smithsonian Institution in Washington sought to take a fresh look at the Enola Gay, the plane that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
At the Hiroshima museum itself, the victim role has been exploited in ways that similarly distort memory.
At the Smithsonian, the Enola Gay was to play a central role in an exhibition meant to depict the Hiroshima bombing in all its complexity.
Dower's research into the different ways Americans and Japanese remember Hiroshima provides us with a good example.
The 12-year-old child's lunchbox blasted at Hiroshima, preserved by chance, with its rice and peas charred by the atomic explosion, weighs as much on our conscience as the Enola Gay.
Existing global stockpiles have a destructive capacity equal to 150,000 Hiroshima bombs, and in handling them there is an omnipresent potential for human error, system error, or misjudgment under stress.
It looked like the aftermath of the firebombing of Tokyo, or like Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the atomic bombs fell.
At this stage, Iran still needs at least a year or longer to assemble one or two crude Hiroshima-type bombs.
As the world commemorates the 65th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki this August, we should recognize that our luck is running out - and take them seriously.
Indeed, the very existence of the Japanese nation was endangered, as most cities were bombed, Okinawa was invaded, and atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
NEW YORK - The destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 marked an end and a beginning. The close of the Second World War ushered in a Cold War, with a precarious peace based on the threat of mutually assured destruction.
Nuclear-armed nations built nearly 100,000 nuclear weapons, bearing the explosive power of about a million six hundred thousand Hiroshima-size bombs.
Only if one musters the courage to envision the bomber and the lunchbox at the same time is it possible to comprehend the tragic vision of history that Hiroshima -- like other episodes that have seared our modern conscience -- most clearly represents.
It cast a dark shadow over humanity, one unseen since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.

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