State Shintō; nationalistic form of Shinto, formerly the official religion of Japan
Ise Shinto (school of Shinto established the Watarai family priests of Ise Jingu's Outer Shrine)
Shinto-Buddhist amalgamation; dual-aspect Shinto
Shrine Shintō; form of Shintō that focuses on worship in shrines, in contrast to folk and sectarian practices
Folk Shinto (term used by Reform Shintoists to refer to sects of syncretized Shinto)
five fundamental texts of Ise Shinto
Sect Shintō; group of folk religious sects, as opposed to State Shintō and later Shrine Shintō
Fukko Shinto; Restoration Shinto; Reform Shinto (prominent 18th century form of Shinto, based on the classics, and free from Confucian and Buddhist influences)
Imperial Household Shinto
Tsuchimikado Shinto (synthesis of Shinto and Onmyōdō formulated by Yasutomi Tsuchimikado in the mid-Edo period)
Shinto shrew (Sorex shinto)
Shintoist; follower of Shintoism
Shinto Shūsei-ha (sect of Shinto)
Shinto Taikyo (sect of Shinto)
Shinto Taiseikyō (sect of Shinto)
Ichijitsu Shinto (alt. name for Hie Shinto: a form of Shinto heavily influenced by Tendai)
Tendai Shinto (alt. name for Hie Shinto: a form of Shinto heavily influenced by Tendai)
Goryū Shinto (sect of amalgamated Shinto)
syncretized Shinto; amalgamated Shinto
Shingon Shinto; any branch of Shinto based on Shingon Buddhist teachings
Tachibana Shinto (Edo-period sect of Suika Shinto popularized by Mitsuyoshi Tachibana)
Yokoyama Shinto (Edo-period Shinto sect promoted by Masae Yokoyama)
Yumiya Shinto (Edo-period sect of Yoshida Shinto)
Miwa Shinto (sect of amalgamated Shinto developed in the Muromachi Period)
Hokke Shinto (Shinto doctrines based on Nichiren Buddhism)
Hakke Shinto (Shinto tradition transmitted by the House of Hakuo Shirakawa); Hakuke Shinto