tsukemen
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tsukemen
Summary
tsukemen is a type of food or dish[1]. tsukemen draws 236 Wikipedia views per month (type_of_food_or_dish category, ranking #77 of 297).[2]
Key Facts
- tsukemen is credited with the discovery of Kazuo Yamagishi[3].
- tsukemen's image is recorded as Tsukemen at a Tokyo restaurant.jpg[4].
- tsukemen's image is recorded as Tsuke-men 001.jpg[5].
- tsukemen's instance of is recorded as type of food or dish[6].
- tsukemen's subclass of is recorded as Japanese noodles[7].
- tsukemen's Commons category is recorded as Tsukemen[8].
- tsukemen's country of origin is recorded as Japan[9].
- tsukemen's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1955-00-00T00:00:00Z[10].
- tsukemen's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/012hr7x2[11].
- tsukemen's indigenous to is recorded as Tokyo[12].
- tsukemen's BabelNet ID is recorded as 15287413n[13].
- tsukemen's TasteAtlas ID is recorded as tsukemen[14].
- tsukemen's NicoNicoPedia ID is recorded as つけ麺[15].
- tsukemen's Golden ID is recorded as Tsukemen_(company)-W6GBJR[16].
- tsukemen's Pixiv Encyclopedia ID is recorded as つけ麺[17].
Body
Works and Contributions
tsukemen is credited with the discovery of Kazuo Yamagishi[3].
Why It Matters
tsukemen draws 236 Wikipedia views per month (type_of_food_or_dish category, ranking #77 of 297).[2] tsukemen has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] tsukemen is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]