User:Yu830

About me
I have been studying English since I was a high school student because my dream is going to travel around the world. There are a lot of beautiful scenery in the world; for example, Aurora seen from Northern Europe, Palau's beautiful sea, Salar de Uyuni, and so on. I want to watch and walk this beautiful scenery in the future.

Speaking of my future job, I want to become a spatial and concept designer. When I was a high school student, I went to the digital art museum called teamLab. Then, I was moved by the many artworks. TeamLab Borderless combines images generated on computers and individual projectors to create infinite space. I had never imaged the beautiful views, and I thought that I also want to make these artworks like teamLab in the future.

My Wikipedia interests
If I'm active on Wikipedia, I will probably improve this Wikipedia site. For example, if there is a wrong information, I will correct the information.

Article evaluation
I have sometimes come to study new proverbs as a hobby. I know that several types of proverbs exist in Japan, how they were made, and how they are used differently. I found this Wikipedia had little to say about Japanese sayings. And then, I visited the Japanese proverbs article on Wikipedia and found three aspects of it worth commenting on: its lack of essential words called Koji-Seigo, its correct usage, and its lack of citations.

Koji-Seigo
This Japanese proverbs article includes three types of Japanese proverbs: sayings, Idiomatic phrases, and Four-character idioms. However, it is not enough to say about Japanese proverbs. They need to include the word called “Koji-Seigo.” A Koji-Seigo is a word made up of what happened in ancient times. There is a word "contradiction" if you give a famous thing that is often used in modern times.

Usage
In this article, they explain that Japanese commonly use proverbs, often citing just the first part of common phrases for brevity by using an example “I no naka no kawazu.” However, this is not enough to speak of the virtues of this proverb. In Japan, there is a return. This is a follow to the saying. There is a continuation of the saying "I no naka no kawazu". (I no naka no kawazu taikai wo shirazu saredo sora no aosa wo shiru). The frog in the well does not know the ocean, but it means that the sky is so clear and blue that no one knows. In this way, this article needs to add a return.

Citation
This article is written [citation needed]. Since there are few citations on this page, I thought it was necessary to add more citation pages.

Summary
For these reasons, I think this Japanese proverbs page on Wikipedia is not enough to say about this. I hope this page improve more.