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Female stock characters in anime and manga (1 C, 17 P) Pages in category "Female characters in anime and manga" The following 106 pages are in this category, out of 106 total.
It includes animated characters that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Subcategories. This category has the ...
Voiced by: Junko Minagawa (video game); Romi Park (anime), Anna Tsuchiya (anime singing voice) (Japanese); Rebecca Shoichet (anime) (English) Ep. 1 Portrayed by: Mika Nakashima Nana Osaki is a 20-year-old girl who moves to Tokyo to pursue a professional music career with her band, Black Stones, of which she is the main vocalist.
Anime television series — [4]: 29 [13] Corrector Yui: 1999 Kia Asamiya: Anime television series Manga [4]: 29 Creamy Mami, the Magic Angel: 1983 Studio Pierrot: Anime television series Manga, OVA [9] Cutie Honey: 1973 Go Nagai: Anime television series Manga, anime film [14] Cutie Honey Flash: 1997 Go Nagai: Anime television series Manga ...
A. List of A.I. Love You characters; List of ACCA: 13-Territory Inspection Dept. characters; List of Accel World characters; List of Ace Attorney characters
She is Fuyuki's good friend, who works as a school nurse. She appears briefly in episode twenty-four of the anime, making sure that Akira and Minoru will do things right, who are in bad terms after the event of episode twenty-one of "Lucky Channel". Fuyuki Amahara (天原 ふゆき, Amahara Fuyuki) Voiced by: Kumi Sakuma (PS2 and PSP video game)
From left to right, Kirara, Sango, Miroku, Kagome Higurashi, Inuyasha and Shippō. The characters of the Inuyasha manga series were created by Rumiko Takahashi.Most of the series takes place in a fictional version of Japan's Warring States period with occasional time-travel/flashback elements to modern Tokyo or the Heisei period.
Takaya gave Tohru a name normally used only for men because she likes to give masculine names to female characters "to balance them out." [10] In addition, Takaya chose to have other characters address her as "Tohru-kun", using an honorific typically used for boys, because she thought it was "a more dignified form of address." [9]