
is the goddess of humor, dancing happiness, joy, dawn, mirth, meditation, revelry and the arts in the Shinto religion of Japan, and the wife of fellow-god Sarutahiko Ōkami. (-no-Mikoto is a common honorific appended to the names of Japanese gods; it may be understood as similar to the English honorific 'the Great'.) She famously helped draw out the missing sun deity, Amaterasu Omikami, when she had hidden herself in a cave. Her name can also be pronounced as Ama-no-Uzume-no-Mikoto. She is also known as Ōmiyanome-no-Ōkami, an inari kami possibly due to her relationship with her husband. She is
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Амэ-но удзумэ (яп. 天宇受賣命 / 天鈿女命 Амэ-но удзумэ-но микото, элемент «удзумэ», возможно, происходит от «удзуси» или «одзоси» («сильный», «мужественный»)) — синтоистская богиня счастья, радости, танцев и театра (покровительница двух последних). Её часто изображают танцующей или держащей в руках актерскую маску женщиной.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).