just (adj.) late 14c., "morally upright, righteous in the eyes of God" ("Now chiefly as a Biblical archaism" - OED); also "equitable, fair, impartial in one's dealings;" also "fitting, proper, conforming to standards or rules;" also "justifiable, reasonable;" from Old French juste "just, righteous; sincere" (12c.) and directly from Latin iustus "upright, righteous, equitable; in accordance with law, lawful; true, proper; perfect, complete" (source also of Spanish and Portuguese justo, Italian giusto), from ius "a right," especially "legal right, law" (see jurist; from Latin ius also come English jury (n.), injury, etc.). I study language, and was curious what exactly you meant by "dangerous" was it the word itself or in such context it was used?
@@ThriceTarot333 He means saying "just burning incense" can give the wrong impression, as if its not some something important, like saying "that guy is not the best swimmer in the world he is 'just' the second best" the word just kind of implies that being the second best is not something hard to achieve. That is why it is dangerous; one wrong placement of the word and it changes the meaning of what you are trying to say.
@@ErisvaldoJunior We tend to use Dragon eye tree (long yan) ash as it is odorless, clean, white and we have tons from our draily tea preparation. Oftentimes, burnt rice paper is used in Japan. Any odorless ash will do, though--ideally white :) Hope that helps!
Aww I wish they'd shown more closeups so we could see what he was doing.....and maybe some subtitles explaining the steps....
What is this great track playing? Just ... wonderful.
Thank you for sharing this beauty. I would like to learn, please could you recommend where in NYC? Thanks a lot.
No idea in terms of NYC unfortunately. We have an online course though
@@globalteahut Thanks a lot. I'll take yours, what to do about the tools (I have none), please? Thanks
@@giovannafederico7321 We sell beginner kits and advanced tools on our website.
What is white powder made of? What kind of ash was it wood? Which
It is ash. Often it comes from rice paper. We use charcoal ash, cleaned and cooked.
What is that white powder?
ash
My favorite life is drink tea calligraphy incense ceremony!
The best way to listen the fragnance :)
Hope can connect with Kodo friends
From Vietnam :)
this is awesome!
Advanced enjoyment👍
I can swear that I could smell it while watching it 😄🙏🏻
Interesting...but overly dramatic for just burning incense....
"just" is a dangerous word, my friend. But we also appreciate simplicity.
just (adj.)
late 14c., "morally upright, righteous in the eyes of God" ("Now chiefly as a Biblical archaism" - OED); also "equitable, fair, impartial in one's dealings;" also "fitting, proper, conforming to standards or rules;" also "justifiable, reasonable;" from Old French juste "just, righteous; sincere" (12c.) and directly from Latin iustus "upright, righteous, equitable; in accordance with law, lawful; true, proper; perfect, complete" (source also of Spanish and Portuguese justo, Italian giusto), from ius "a right," especially "legal right, law" (see jurist; from Latin ius also come English jury (n.), injury, etc.).
I study language, and was curious what exactly you meant by "dangerous" was it the word itself or in such context it was used?
@@ThriceTarot333 He means saying "just burning incense" can give the wrong impression, as if its not some something important, like saying "that guy is not the best swimmer in the world he is 'just' the second best" the word just kind of implies that being the second best is not something hard to achieve. That is why it is dangerous; one wrong placement of the word and it changes the meaning of what you are trying to say.
what is this white powder?
ash :)
@@globalteahut but, what material
@@ErisvaldoJunior We tend to use Dragon eye tree (long yan) ash as it is odorless, clean, white and we have tons from our draily tea preparation. Oftentimes, burnt rice paper is used in Japan. Any odorless ash will do, though--ideally white :) Hope that helps!
@@globalteahut Thank you