| |
| | Glossary |
 | | For the plays Kuzu and Arashiyama, another mask copied from a Buddhist deity, zaô, can be used. |
 | | The last was to become a highly regulated feature of the named masks and functioned as an iconoclastic identification of mask types. |
 | | Today, young women masks include the standard masks of each school (ko-omote, magojirô, wakaonna fushikizô, and their variations) used for a wide variety of roles, plus masks with troubled expressions for crazed women (masugami, etc.), sublime expressions for angels (zô), and subtly intense expressions for possessed or divine beings (deigan). |
| www.glopac.org /Jparc/tjtglossary/mainGLOSS.html (14365 words) |
|