one more order of rice, please - translation to greek
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one more order of rice, please - translation to greek

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One hundred sacks of rice; One hundred bags of rice; Kome Hyappyo
  • Kobayashi Torasaburō
  • [[Kokkan Gakko]] school

one more order of rice, please      
άλλη μια μερίδα ρύζι
in brief         
  • First edition, 1876
  • Henry M. Robert
  • upright
  • upright
1876 BOOK BY HENRY MARTYN ROBERT
Robert's rules of order; Roberts Rules of Order; Robert's Rules; Roberts Rules; Roberts rules of order; Roberts' Rules of Order; Robert's Rules of Order: Newly Revised; Robert Rules of Order; Robert’s Rules of Order; Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised; RONR; Robert's Rules of Order, Newly Revised; Robert's rules; In Brief; Pocket manual of rules of order
εν συντομία
one more time         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
One More Time (song); One More Time (disambiguation); One More Time (film); One More Time (album); One More Time (TV series)
άλλη μιά φορά

Definition

Stop order
·add. ·- An order that aims to limit losses by fixing a figure at which purchases shall be sold or sales bought in, as where stock is bought at 100 and the broker is directed to sell if the market price drops to 98.

Wikipedia

Kome Hyappyō

Kome Hyappyō (米百俵; literally "One Hundred Bags of Rice" or "One Hundred Sacks of Rice") refers to an event in Japan in which rice sacks were sold to provide education instead of being consumed. This historical anecdote symbolizes the idea that patience and perseverance in the present will lead to profit in the future.

The Nagaoka Domain (now the city of Nagaoka in Niigata Prefecture) suffered great destruction during the Boshin War of the Meiji Restoration in the late 1860s and much of their food-production capability was lost. The neighboring Mineyama Domain (now the town of Maki in Nishikanbara District, Niigata) provided assistance in the form of one hundred sacks of rice. The rice was intended for hunger relief but Kobayashi Torasaburō, one of the chief executives of Nagaoka, proposed a plan to sell the rice and use the money for education instead. Samurai clan leaders and the famished public initially protested the idea, but Kobayashi appealed, saying "If hundred bags of rice are eaten, they are lost instantly, but if they are put towards education, they will become the ten-thousand or one million bags of tomorrow." Kobayashi prevailed and the rice was sold to finance the construction of the Kokkan Gakko school. This is the modern-day elementary school (grades 1–6) Sakanoue, which continues teaching the Kome Hyappyo history and tradition.