Paper-covered sliding screens used to divide rooms or cover windows.
paper walls, exterior (see fusuma)
a translucent screen made of a wooden frame covered with rice paper
an essential component of traditional Japanese architecture
a sliding screen used for doors and windows in traditional Japanese houses and rooms (many Western-style houses in Japan have one or more Japanese-style rooms in them)
A paper window consisting of translucent squares of paper laid between the spaces of a thin wooden lattice.
latticed, paper-covered window or sliding door ( fusuma are opaque shoji)
sliding screen or wall made of paper on a wooden frame.
Sliding screen, covered with paper.
Paper covered sliding doors.
(Pronunciation: "SHOH-jee") Sliding doors consisting of translucent paper pasted over a rigid wooden framework. Shoji are used extensively around the periphery of traditional Japanese buildings in order to allow light to enter the rooms.