Coming down the map from the north of Sakhalin Island, we next meet Hokkaido Island that parenthesizes the sea of japan, and then Japan proper. It was anciently inhabited by the Inu (pron. eenoo) people, called the Hairy Ones because their bodies were thickly covered with hair.
The term Inu evolved, however, from Protong In U(t), which means Elsewhere S(unken), as a reference to the original homeland which had submerged in the Deluge. The name of the island was anciently Go Ka Id (J)o, also remembering the motherland: Exiled Where Migrated I (from).
Coincidentally, the Eskimos have another, very similar name for themselves, Inuit, which evolved from In U(t) Id: Elsewhere S(unken) Migrated (from). Their original homeland, now taken by the sea, is the same as the homeland of the Inus.
To me the Inu faces look most representatively Russian (as a child I have seen Russian soldiers permanently stationed in Polish towns), specifically in the extremely short, bridgeless wan-nose. One often sees Russian subjects, however, who seem mistakenly handsome. The reason is simply that these are no part of the Tataroid Moscovian minority, but of some 60 nations that are permanently parasited on by this minority.
The Inu, however, having lived in the hardships of the sub-Arctic region for multi-millennia, never became parasites of other nations as this facial type so often does.
