Public Holidays Softwar [email protected]

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Public Holidays Softwar .Support@Pb.Com Pitn y Bow s Softwar Worldwid 2020 Obs rv d Global Softwar Support Public Holidays softwar [email protected] US Pub ic Ho idays Date UK Pub ic Ho idays Date New Yea ’s Day 01 Janua y New Yea ’s Day 01 Janua y Ma tin Luthe King J Day 20 Janua y Good F iday 10 Ap il P esident' s Day 17 Feb ua y Easte Monday 13 Ap il Memo ial Day 25 May May Day (+ VE Day) 08 May Independence Day (Obse ved) 03 July Sp ing Bank Holiday 25 May Designated Holiday 06 July Summe Bank Holiday 31 August Labo Day 07 Septembe Ch istmas Day 25 Decembe Thanksgiving Day 26 Novembe Boxing Day 28 Decembe Day afte Thanksgiving 27 Novembe Ch istmas Eve 24 Decembe Ch istmas Day 25 Decembe Austra ian Ho idays Date Japanese Ho idays Date New Yea ’ s Day 01 Janua y 元日 (New Yea ’s Day) 01 Janua y Aust alia Day (Obse ved) 27 Janua y 成人 の日 (Coming of Age Day) 13 Janua y Canbe a Day (ACT Only) 09 Ma ch 建 記念の日 (National Foundation Day) 11 Feb ua y Labou Day (VIC Only) 09 Ma ch 天皇誕生日 (Empe o ’s Bi thday) 24 Feb ua y Good F iday 10 Ap il 春分 の日 (Ve nal Equinox Day) 20 Ma ch Easte Monday 13 Ap il 昭和 の日 (Bi thday of Empe o Shōwa) 29 Ap il Anzac Day (WA Only) 27 Ap il みどり の日 (G eene y Day) 04 May Labou Day (QLD Only) 04 May こどもの 日 (Child en ’s Day) 05 May Reconciliation Day (ACT Only) 01 June 憲法記念日 (Constitution Memo ial Day Obse ved) 06 May Queen’s Bi thday (Except QLD & WA) 08 June 海 の日 (Ma ine Day) 23 July Ekka Wednesday (QLD B isbane Only) 12 August 体育 の日 (Health and Spo ts Day) 24 July AFL G and Final F iday (VIC Only) 25 Septembe 山の日 (Mountain Day Obse ved) 10 August Labou Day (NSW & ACT Only) 05 Octobe 敬老 の日 (Respect fo the Aged Day) 21 Septembe Queen’s Bi thday (QLD Only) 05 Octobe 秋分 の日 (Autumnal Equinox) 22 Septembe Melbou ne Cup Day (VIC Only) 03 Novembe 文化の日 (National Cultu e Day) 03 Novembe Ch istmas Day 25 Decembe 勤労感謝の日 (Labou Thanksgiving Day) 23 Novembe Boxing Day 28 Decembe French Ho idays Date German Ho idays Date New Yea ’s Day (P emie de l' an / Jou de l' an) 01 Janua y New Yea ’s Day (Neujah stag) 01 Janua y Easte Monday (Lundi de Pâques) 13 Ap il Good F iday (Ka f eitag) 10 Ap il Labou Day (Fête du T avail) 01 May Easte Monday (Oste montag) 13 Ap il V- E Day (Fête de la Victoi e) 08 May Labou Day (Tag de A beit) 01 May Ascension Day (Jou de l' Ascension) 21 May Ascension (Ch isti Himmelfah t) 21 May Whit Monday (Lundi de Pentecôte) 01 June Whitmonday/Pentecost Monday (Pfingstmontag) 01 June Bastille Day (Fête Nationale) 14 July Ch istmas Day (1. Weihnachtstag) 25 Decembe A mistice Day (Jou d' a mistice) 11 Novembe Ch istmas Day (Noël) 25 Decembe Norwegian Ho idays Date Singapore Ho idays Date New Yea ’s Day 01 Janua y New Yea ’s Day 01 Janua y Maundy Thu sday 09 Ap il Chinese New Yea 27 Janua y Good F iday 10 Ap il Good F iday 10 Ap il Easte Monday 13 Ap il Labou Day 01 May May Day / Labou Day 01 May Vesak Day 07 May Constitution Day 17 May Ha i Raya Puasa (Obse ved) 25 May Ascension Day 21 May Ha i Raya Haji 31 July Whit Monday 01 June National Day (Obse ved) 10 August Ch istmas Day 25 Decembe Deepavali (Obse ved) 16 Novembe St. Stephen' s Day 26 Decembe Ch istmas Day 25 Decembe Phi ippines Ho iday Date Indian Ho idays Date New Yea ’ s Day 01 Janua y New Yea 's Day 01 Janua y Chinese Luna New Yea 's Day 25 Janua y Maka Sank anti (Pune Only) 15 Janua y People Powe Annive sa y 25 Feb ua y Maha Shiv at i 21 Feb ua y A aw ng Kagitingan 09 Ap il Holi 10 Ma ch Maundy Thu sday 09 Ap il Rama Navami (Noida Only) 02 Ap il Good F iday 10 Ap il Mahavi Jayanti 06 Ap il Labo Day 01 May Good F iday 10 Ap il Independence Day 12 June Labo Day (Pune Only) 01 May Ninoy Aquino Day 21 August Ramzan Id/Eid- ul -Fita 25 May National He oes Day Holiday 31 August Ralshabandhan 03 August All Saints Day 01 Novembe Janmashtami (Noida Only) 11 August Additional special (non- wo king) day 02 Novembe Janmashtami (Pune Only) 12 August Bonifacio Day 30 Novembe Mathatma Gandhi Jayanti 02 Octobe Feast of the Immaculate Conception of Ma y 08 Decembe Vishwaka ma (Diwali - Obse ved) (Noida Only) 13 Novembe Additional special (non- wo king) day 24 Decembe Bhai Dooj 16 Novembe Ch istmas Day 25 Decembe Gu u Nanak Bi thday 30 Novembe Rizal Day 30 Decembe Ch istmas 25 Decembe Last Day of the Yea 31 Decembe .
Recommended publications
  • Package 'Nippon'
    Package ‘Nippon’ July 2, 2014 Type Package Title Japanese utility functions and data Version 0.5.3 Date 2013-07-26 Author Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> Maintainer Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> Depends maptools Suggests RColorBrewer, foreign Description This package provides some Japanese utility functions and data, which may be use- ful for Japanese R users. License GPL (>= 2) Encoding UTF-8 NeedsCompilation yes Repository CRAN Date/Publication 2013-07-26 16:40:48 R topics documented: Nippon-package . .2 JapaneseColors . .2 JapanPrefecturesMap . .3 jholiday . .5 jyear . .6 kakasi . .7 kata2hira . .9 month.name.jp . 10 Nippon-internal . 11 1 2 JapaneseColors nippon.palette . 11 prefectures . 12 romanization . 13 sjis2utf8 . 15 zen2han . 16 Index 17 Nippon-package Japanese utility functions and data Description This package provides some Japanese utility functions and data, which may be useful not only for Japanese R users but for the English-speaking world. Details Package: Nippon Type: Package Version: 0.5.3 Date: 2013-07-26 License: GPL (>=2) To avoid troubles with Japanese strings, non-ASCII Japanese characters in R object is sanitized or converted into ASCII characters by utility functions in this package. Some common data for Japanese are planned to preset, for preventing from burdensome input. (Those will be reinforced in further version). Author(s) Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> JapaneseColors Find RGB by Japanese color names Description JapaneseColors returns RGB values from Japanese traditional color names, which are defined by Japanese Industrial Standard (JIS). Usage JapaneseColors(names) JapanPrefecturesMap 3 Arguments names A chracter vector. The JIS name of Japanese traditional colors can be written in UTF-8 encoded Japanese (Kanji, or Hiragana), or Romaji (ASCII).
    [Show full text]
  • Visitbritain Market Profile Japan
    Market and Trade Profile Japan Market and Trade Profile: Japan January 2020 Market and Trade Profile Japan Overview • ‘Chapter 1: Inbound market statistics’ provides insights on key statistics about Japanese travellers, where they are going, and who they are. It also takes a look at Britain as a destination and its competitive set. • ‘Chapter 2: Experiences and perceptions’ features details about what visitors from Japan are likely to do in the UK, how they felt during their visit to the UK, and whether they would recommend a stay there to their acquaintances. Perceptions of Britain held by Japanese people in general are also highlighted. • ‘Chapter 3: Understanding the market’ takes a close look at consumer trends in Japan, and the booking, planning and further travel behaviour of this source market. Some details on how to best reach consumers in Japan are indicated too. • ‘Chapter 4: Access and travel trade’ shows how people from Japan travel to the UK, how to best cater for their needs and wants during their stay and gives insights into the Japanese travel trade. Further ways of working with VisitBritain and other useful research resources are pointed out in the appendix. 2 Market and Trade Profile China Contents (1) Executive summary (page 6) Chapter 1: Market statistics 1.1 Key statistics (page 11) Tourism context, UK inbound overview, key figures on journey purpose, seasonality, duration of stay and accommodation trends, repeat visits, and visit types 1.2 Getting around Britain (page 18) Where visitors stayed in the UK, places they
    [Show full text]
  • The Life and Work of Japanese Expatriate Employees in Indonesia
    From the Porous Spaces on the Bubble: The Life and Work of Japanese Expatriate Employees in Indonesia and their Relations with the Host Society Yukimi Shimoda B.A., M.A. This thesis is presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of The University of Western Australia Discipline of Anthropology of Sociology School of Social and Cultural Studies 2011 ABSTRACT This is an ethnographic study of both geographical and spatial transnational ‘migrants’, namely, expatriate employees of transnational organisations/corporations, who work away from home countries for a limited period, and their relationships with host national colleagues who work alongside them in transnational office spaces. The central aims of this study are to explore the ways in which expatriate and host national employees work and interact with each other in and out of office spaces and to consider the influences and meanings of the movement of these people and their face-to-face interactions in our globalising societies. The dominant view in the existing social science literature is that ‘elite’, ‘cosmopolitan’ expatriate employees live in a ‘bubble’ cut off from the host societies. This ‘enclosed’ image of the ‘bubble’ sets up a strong contrast with the ‘openness’ that is often associated with their mobility. Meanwhile, in business studies, host national employees tend to be invisible and situated as subordinates to their superiors, namely expatriate employees. This study brings the lived experiences of both expatriate and host national employees into both the social sciences and business studies, shedding light on both constituencies in a balanced manner. This is also a relatively unique case study which focuses on Asian expatriate employees working in an Asian country.
    [Show full text]
  • Shooting Stars and Dancing Fish: a Walk to the World We Want
    Pace University DigitalCommons@Pace Environmental Law Program Publications @ Haub Law School of Law 2017 Shooting Stars and Dancing Fish: A Walk to the World We Want Tony Oposa School of the SEA, Bantayan, Cebu, Philippines, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/environmental Part of the Agriculture Law Commons, Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, Energy and Utilities Law Commons, Environmental Law Commons, Food and Drug Law Commons, International Law Commons, Land Use Law Commons, Natural Resources Law Commons, Oil, Gas, and Mineral Law Commons, and the Water Law Commons Recommended Citation Tony Oposa, Shooting Stars and Dancing Fish: A Walk to the World We Want (2017). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the School of Law at DigitalCommons@Pace. It has been accepted for inclusion in Environmental Law Program Publications @ Haub Law by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Pace. For more information, please contact [email protected]. a walk to the world we want tony oposa Shooting Stars and Dancing Fish A Walk to the World We Want Antonio A. Oposa, Jr. Copyright © 2017 by Antonio A. Oposa, Jr. School of the SEA Barangay OK-oy! Sta. Fe Bantayan Island, Cebu The Philippines www.oposa.ph [email protected] All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, for profit, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Published by: 35 Lopez Jaena Street Cebu City 6000 The Philippines Tel/Fax: (63 32) 411-1700 / 343-1700 www.rafi.org.ph ISBN: 978-971-95996-7-8 Editor: Eileen G.
    [Show full text]
  • Doing Business in Japan 2012 the EEPC INDIA ‘DOING BUSINESS’ SERIES
    Doing Business in Japan 2012 THE EEPC INDIA ‘DOING BUSINESS’ SERIES THE EEPC INDIA ‘DOING BUSINESS’ SERIES Doing Business in Japan 2012 A leap of faith to bring countries together Where love is deep, much will be accomplished. – Shinichi Suzuki ENTURING into a country which is technologically far superior Vis a leap of faith in the best of circumstances. Trade Promotion organizations should, however, encourage such daring. EEPC India, which is one such trade and investment promotion organization dedicated to the engineering sector, does. Under the “India Show” umbrella of the Department of Commerce, Ministry of Commerce & Industry, EEPC India has been instrumental in taking a large contingent of Indian engineering companies to Turkey in February 2011 and to Canada in October 2011. A view of Tokyo Doing Business in Japan 2012 The avowed objective was not only to promote Brand India which began in 1958. Japanese companies, such as Sony, in the engineering sector but also to encourage bilateral trade Toyota, and Honda, have manufacturing facilities in India, and and investments since intra-industry is today the bedrock of with the growth of the Indian economy, India is a big market for 6 globalization that leads to mutual welfare gains among nations. Japanese firms. Japanese firms were, in fact, some of the first Continuing with this unique method of joining nations firms to invest in India. The most prominent Japanese company together, EEPC India, which is a Trade and Investment to have an investment in India is automobiles giant Suzuki, Promotion organization under the Indian Ministry of Commerce which is in partnership with Indian automobiles company Maruti & Industry, will be participating with its member companies Suzuki, the largest car manufacturer in India and a subsidiary of at the M-Tech 2012 show in Tokyo, Japan between 20 the Japanese company.
    [Show full text]
  • A Week in Japan Dossier Classic Tour │9 Days│Physical Level 1 Tokyo – Hakone – Kyoto – Osaka
    1 A Week in Japan Dossier Classic Tour │9 Days│Physical Level 1 Tokyo – Hakone – Kyoto – Osaka Take a week to explore the top highlights of this futuristic and eccentric country. Start in Tokyo, then travel to Hakone and the iconic Mount Fuji; explore Kyoto’s traditional streets and temples. Finish in vibrant Osaka. If you’re hungry to see Japan but don’t have much time, this tour is perfect for you! ▪ Discover Tokyo’s temples and vibrant city streets ▪ Admire breath-taking Mount Fuji ▪ Experience the speedy bullet train ▪ Explore Japan’s history in Kyoto ▪ Meet Nara’s friendly deer To book call 1300 727 998 or visit your local travel agent Visit wendywutours.com.au 2 A Week in Japan tour inclusions: ▪ Return international economy flights, taxes and current fuel surcharges (unless a land only option is selected) ▪ All accommodation ▪ All meals (From dinner on day 2 to breakfast on the last day) ▪ All sightseeing and entrance fees ▪ All transportation and transfers ▪ English speaking National Escort ▪ Specialist advice from our experienced travel consultants ▪ Comprehensive travel guides The only thing you may have to pay for are personal expenditure e.g. drinks, optional excursions or shows, insurance of any kind, early check in or late checkout and other items not specified on the itinerary. Classic Tours: These tours are designed for those who wish to see the iconic sites and magnificent treasures of Japan on an excellent value group tour travelling with like-minded people. The tours are on a fully inclusive basis so you will travel with the assurance that all your arrangements are taken care of.
    [Show full text]
  • Package 'Nippon'
    Package ‘Nippon’ November 28, 2017 Type Package Title Japanese Utility Functions and Data Version 0.6.5 Date 2017-11-28 Author Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> [aut, cre], Hironobu Takahashi [cph], Hajime Baba [cph], Takatsugu Nokubi [cph] Maintainer Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> Depends maptools, sp, stringr, sf Suggests RColorBrewer, foreign Description Japan-specific data is sometimes too unhandy for R users to manage. The utility func- tions and data in this package disencumber us from such an unnecessary burden. License GPL (>= 2) Encoding UTF-8 NeedsCompilation yes Repository CRAN Date/Publication 2017-11-28 18:21:17 UTC R topics documented: Nippon-package . .2 JapaneseColors . .2 JapanPrefecturesMap . .3 jholiday . .5 jyear . .6 kakasi . .7 kata2hira . .9 month.name.jp . 10 Nippon-internal . 11 nippon.palette . 11 1 2 JapaneseColors prefectures . 12 romanization . 13 sanitizeZenkaku . 15 sjis2utf8 . 16 wareki2AD . 17 zen2han . 18 Index 20 Nippon-package Japanese Utility Functions and Data Description Japan-specific data is sometimes too unhandy for R users to manage. The utility functions and data in this package disencumber us from such an unnecessary burden. Details Package: Nippon Type: Package Version: 0.6.4 Date: 2017-11-22 License: GPL (>=2) To avoid troubles with Japanese strings, non-ASCII Japanese characters in R object is sanitized or converted into ASCII characters by utility functions in this package. Some common data for Japanese are planned to preset, for preventing from burdensome input. (Those will be reinforced in further version). Author(s) Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> JapaneseColors Find RGB by Japanese color names Description JapaneseColors returns RGB values from Japanese traditional color names, which are defined by Japanese Industrial Standard (JIS).
    [Show full text]
  • Holiday Considerations
    HOLIDAY CONSIDERATIONS ! Important considerations Local courier service (pickup and delivery) may be limited prior to, during and following observed holidays in the country to which you are shipping specimens. It is imperative that you check local service schedules in advance of the holiday. Listed below are important considerations when planning your patient visits during the holidays. - Your courier service reserves the right to observe earlier than usual pick-up times during the holidays. Call your courier service for local pick-up schedules. - During the December/National holidays, schedule your pickups in advance of the holiday where possible. - Call early in the day to schedule your pickup. - When a holiday is observed on Monday, avoid laboratory collections on the preceding Saturday (i.e. Labor Day). (Not applicable to Japan) - Frozen specimens should NOT be shipped on the day before the observed holiday. Send frozen specimens on the next available business day. (Not applicable to Japan) - If shipping specimens on Friday, mark airway bill for Saturday delivery. (Not applicable for Japan) - Specimens with short stabilities (eg. lymphocyte subsets, reticulocyte counts, etc.) should not be collected on the day prior to the holiday. (Not applicable to Japan) - For sites with 24 hours delivery time to Covance, do not schedule any shipment 24 hours before one of the dates on the next pages. (Not applicable for Japan) - For sites with 48 hours delivery time to Covance, do not schedule any shipment 48 hours before one of the dates on the
    [Show full text]
  • Eins Zurück, Zwei Vor – Feiertage in Japan
    Eins zurück, zwei vor – Feiertage in Japan Markus Thier Wer bereits einen Blick in einen japanischen Kalender für die Jahre 2008 und 2009 geworfen hat, der mag sich vielleicht gewundert haben, dass in beiden Jahren jeweils der 6. Mai als ein Feiertag gekennzeichnet ist. Oft fehlt dann allerdings eine nähere Bezeichnung, um welchen Feiertag es sich genau handelt. Noch größer scheint die Verwirrung zu werden, wenn in manchen Kalendern der 6. Mai im Jahre 2008 als „Tag der Umwelt“, im Jahre 2009 hingegen als „Tag der Verfassung“ bezeichnet wird. Aufschluss über den Grund dieses Phänomens bringt ein Blick in das japanische „Gesetz betreffend die Feiertage des Volkes“ 1 aus dem Jahre 1948 ( Shôwa 23), auch kurz Feiertagsgesetz ( Shukujitsu-hô ) genannt. Dort findet sich in Art. 2 zunächst eine chronologische Zusammenstellung der staat- lichen Feiertage in Japan nebst einer kurzen Losung (siehe den tabellarischen Überblick auf der folgenden Seite). Betrachtet man diese Aufstellung, so fällt für die hier in Rede stehende erste Monats- dekade im Mai zum einen auf, dass der 6. Mai zunächst einmal grundsätzlich nicht als ein Feiertag definiert ist. Zum anderen findet sich in dieser Zeit eine besondere Anballung von Feiertagen (renkyû ), beginnend mit dem 29. April und den nur wenige Tage später sogar direkt hintereinander folgenden drei Feiertagen vom 3. bis 5. Mai. Von vielen Japanern werden diese – in Japan zugleich klimatisch günstigen – Tage jedes Jahr genutzt, um in Kombi- nation mit wenigen privat genommenen Urlaubstagen eine komplette freie Arbeits- woche zum Verreisen zu gewinnen. Deswegen wird diese Zeit auch weitverbreitet als golden week ( gôruden uiiku ) bezeichnet und gilt als eine feste Institution.
    [Show full text]
  • Package 'Nippon'
    Package ‘Nippon’ March 28, 2013 Type Package Title Japanese utility functions and data Version 0.5.1 Date 2012-03-28 Author Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> Maintainer Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> Depends maptools Suggests RColorBrewer, classInt, foreign Description This package provides some Japanese utility functions and data, which may be useful for Japanese R users. License GPL (>= 2) Encoding UTF-8 NeedsCompilation yes Repository CRAN Date/Publication 2013-03-28 12:36:39 R topics documented: Nippon-package . .2 JapaneseColors . .2 JapanPrefecturesMap . .3 jholiday . .5 jyear . .7 kakasi . .8 kata2hira . 10 month.name.jp . 11 Nippon-internal . 11 1 2 JapaneseColors nippon.palette . 12 prefectures . 13 romanization . 14 sjis2utf8 . 15 zen2han . 16 Index 18 Nippon-package Japanese utility functions and data Description This package provides some Japanese utility functions and data, which may be useful not only for Japanese R users but for the English-speaking world. Details Package: Nippon Type: Package Version: 0.4.3 Date: 2013-02-26 License: GPL (>=2) To avoid troubles with Japanese strings, non-ASCII Japanese characters in R object is sanitized or converted into ASCII characters by utility functions in this package. Some common data for Japanese are planned to preset, for preventing from burdensome input. (Those will be reinforced in further version). Author(s) Susumu Tanimura <[email protected]> JapaneseColors Find RGB by Japanese color names Description JapaneseColors returns RGB values from Japanese traditional color names, which are defined by Japanese Industrial Standard (JIS). Usage JapaneseColors(names) JapanPrefecturesMap 3 Arguments names A chracter vector. The JIS name of Japanese traditional colors can be written in UTF-8 encoded Japanese (Kanji, or Hiragana), or Romaji (ASCII).
    [Show full text]
  • China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan on Film
    CHINA, HONG KONG AND TAIWAN ON FILM, TELEVISION AND VIDEO IN THE MOTION PICTURE, BROADCASTING AND RECORDED SOUND DIVISION OF THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Compiled by Zoran Sinobad June 2020 Introduction This is an annotated guide to non-fiction moving image materials related to China, Hong Kong and Taiwan in the collections of the Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division of the Library of Congress. The guide encompasses a wide variety of items from the earliest days of cinema to the present, and focuses on films, TV programs and videos with China as the main subject. It also includes theatrical newsreels (e.g. Fox Movietone News) and TV news magazines (e.g. 60 Minutes) with distinct segments related to the subject. How to Use this Guide Titles are listed in chronological order by date of release or broadcast, and alphabetically within the same year. This enables users to follow the history of the region and for the most part groups together items dealing with the same historical event and/or period (e.g. Sino-Japanese conflict, World War II, Cold War, etc.). Credits given for each entry are as follows: main title, production company, distributor / broadcaster (if different from production company), country of production (if not U.S.), release year / broadcast date, series title (if not TV), and basic personnel listings (director, producer, writer, narrator). The holdings listed are access copies unless otherwise noted. The physical properties given are: number of carriers (reels, tapes, discs, or digital files), video format (VHS, U- matic, DVD, etc.), running time, sound/silent, black & white/color, wide screen process (if applicable, e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • Japan Destination Guide
    Japan Destination Guide Overview of Japan Key Facts Language: Japanese is the official language. Most Japanese people will have studied English at school, but few can speak it well or understand exactly what is said to them in English. Passport/Visa: Currency: Electricity: Electrical current is 100 volts, 60Hz in the west (Osaka, Kyoto, Nagoya, Hiroshima); 100 volts, 50Hz in eastern Japan (Tokyo, Sapporo, Yokohoma). Flat two- and three-pin plugs are used. Travel guide by wordtravels.com © Globe Media Ltd. By its very nature much of the information in this travel guide is subject to change at short notice and travellers are urged to verify information on which they're relying with the relevant authorities. Travmarket cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above. Event details can change. Please check with the organizers that an event is happening before making travel arrangements. We cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above. Page 1/10 Japan Destination Guide Travel to Japan Overview Climate in Japan Health Notes when travelling to Japan Safety Notes when travelling to Japan Customs in Japan Duty Free in Japan Doing Business in Japan Communication in Japan Tipping in Japan Passport/Visa Note Entry Requirements Entry requirements for Americans: Entry requirements for Canadians: Entry requirements for UK nationals: Entry requirements for Australians: Entry requirements for Irish nationals: Entry requirements for New Zealanders: Entry requirements for South Africans: Travel guide by wordtravels.com © Globe Media Ltd.
    [Show full text]