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・ Ebonite
・ Ebino VLF transmitter
・ Ebino, Miyazaki
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・ Ebira people
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Ebisu (mythology)
・ Ebisu Circuit
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・ Ebisu Station
・ Ebisu Station (Hyōgo)
・ Ebisu Station (Tokyo)
・ Ebisu, Shibuya
・ Ebisu-cho Station (Hiroshima)
・ Ebisuchō Station
・ Ebisuchō Station (Osaka)
・ Ebisuminami, Shibuya
・ Ebisunishi, Shibuya, Tokyo
・ EBIT
・ Ebitimi Agogu


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Ebisu (mythology) : ウィキペディア英語版
Ebisu (mythology)

, also transliterated or called or , is the Japanese god of fishermen and luck. He is one of the , and the only one of the seven to originate purely from Japan without any Hindu or Chinese influence.
==Origins as Hiruko==

In medieval times, Ebisu's origin came to be tied together with that of ''Hiruko'' - the first child of Izanagi and Izanami, born without bones (or, in some stories, without arms and legs) due to his mother's transgression during the marriage ritual. Hiruko struggled to survive but, as he could not stand, he was cast to the sea in a boat of reeds before his third birthday.〔
〕 The story tells that Hiruko eventually washed ashore—possibly in —and was cared for by the Ainu . It is however believed that Ebisu first arose as a god among fishermen, and that his origin as Hiruko was a much later conception, after the worship of him had spread to merchants and others. It is also theorized that he was originally a god known as "Kotoronushi no Mikoto," son of Ōkuninushi.〔Encyclopedia Nipponica (Shogakukan): "えびす"〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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