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School Days DVD volume 1. School Days is an anime television series based on the visual novel of the same name. The series was produced by TNK [1] as a twelve-episode television series and two direct-to-video releases. The series premiered on July 3, 2007 on TV Kanagawa and aired its final episode on September 26 on AT-X.
The Tonkawa are a Native American tribe from Oklahoma and Texas. [2] Their Tonkawa language, now extinct, [4] is a linguistic isolate. [5] Today, Tonkawa people are enrolled in the federally recognized Tonkawa Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma, headquartered in Tonkawa, Oklahoma. [6] They have more than 700 tribal citizens. [1]
Fly Me to the Moon (Japanese: トニカクカワイイ, Hepburn: Tonikaku Kawaii, lit. ' Adorable Anyways ' or ' Cute, No Matter What '), also known outside Japan as Tonikawa: Over the Moon for You, is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kenjiro Hata.
Cover of the first Blu-ray and DVD volume released by Happinet in Japan on April 3, 2012. Daily Lives of High School Boys is a 2011-12 slice of life Japanese anime series based on the manga series of the same name written and illustrated by Yasunobu Yamauchi.
High&Low:The Story of S.W.O.R.D. is a Japanese Action television series produced by LDH and NTV.As the first media production of the High&Low franchise, it began the franchise and introduced the basic background of the world of High&Low, serving as a prelude for the High&Low films released in 2016 and later.
Love Live! School Idol Project is an anime television series produced by Sunrise in collaboration with ASCII Media Works and Lantis as part of the Love Live! franchise. The series follows a group of school girls who form an idol group in order to save their school from being shut down.
Kotoko Aihara (相原 琴子, Aihara Kotoko) (Voiced by: Nana Mizuki; Portrayed by: Aiko Sato, Honoka Miki in the 2013 remake, Reina Visa in the 2016 film) is a high school girl who has been in love with the handsome and intelligent Naoki Irie since their first year in high school after hearing his speech at the opening ceremony. She is a bit ...
The film follows an original story with the boys of Sanada North holding a joint school festival with the neighboring all-girls high school. [32] Director Matsui remarked that he had spent his high school years in an all-boys school himself and identified with the Daily Lives so much that he began looking at the boys' logic objectively.