[おくにかぶき, okunikabuki] (n) Okuni kabuki; progenitor of modern kabuki, developed by Izumo Taisha shrine maiden Izumo no Okuni and popularized in Kyoto (early Edo period)
[いっぱんか, ippanka] (n) (1) generalization; generalisation; popularization; popularisation; (vs) (2) to generalize; to generalise; to popularize; to popularise
[たちばなしんとう, tachibanashintou] (n) (See 垂加神道) Tachibana Shinto (Edo-period sect of Suika Shinto popularized by Mitsuyoshi Tachibana)
[しんがく, shingaku] (n) Edo-period popularized blend of Buddhist, Shinto and Confucian ethical teachings (popularised)
[しんがく, shingaku] (n) (See 清・しん) Qing-era Chinese music (popularized in Japan during the early 19th century)
[せきもんしんがく, sekimonshingaku] (n) (See 心学) Edo-period popularized blend of Buddhist, Shinto and Confucian ethical teachings (popularised)
[だるまうた, darumauta] (n) (obsc) confusing song or poem (esp. used derogatorily to describe a style of middle-age Japanese poetry popularized by Fujiwara no Teika)
[だんりんふう, danrinfuu] (n) (See 談林派, 俳諧) playful style of haikai poetry popularized in the mid-seventeenth century
[てんめいちょう, tenmeichou] (n) (1) (See 天明・2, 蕉風) style of haikai or haiku from the Tenmei era (based on a return to the style of Basho); (2) (See 狂歌) style of comical tanka from the Tenmei era (popularized by Oota Nampo)
[どうがく, dougaku] (n) (1) ethics; moral philosophy; (2) (the study of) Confucianism (esp. neo-Confucianism); (3) (the study of) Taoism; (4) (See 石門心学) Edo-period popularized blend of Buddhist, Shinto and Confucian ethical teachings (popularised)