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Prior to writing I Think I Turned My Childhood Friend into a Girl, Azusa Banjo liked characters who defy gender roles, such as otokonoko, cross-dressing women, and women using the boyish pronoun boku, [2] [4] and had debuted as a manga creator with an otokonoko story. [4]
Coming to admire her talent, Feng Chengjun secretly sets a plan in motion that leaves her with no choice but to enroll in the Yun Shang Academy. As the school only accepts male students, Xue Wenxi disguises herself as a boy (using her brother's name Wenbin), and lives everyday on thin ice to guard her secret.
Ji-Hae is a regular high school girl who has had a crush on Seung-Hyu for a very long time. Seung-Hyu has rejected Ji-Hae's public confessions of love on multiple occasions. After her last & most embarrassing declaration of love, Seung-Hyu lost his patience and pushed her, causing Ji-hae to fall down a flight of stairs to her death.
A gyaru high school girl who has an interest in rock music; however, she is unable to share her interests to her closest friends due to her friends preferring contemporary music and out of fear of being alienated. She first gets acquainted with Mitsuki through stumbling upon the record store by chance and develops a crush on Mitsuki's workplace ...
By setting problems that require her to think logically and use her workers effectively, he hopes to force a more mature way of thinking on her. Unfortunately, when Lili transforms into her guardian form Fenrir, she is able to bypass the problems with stubborn strength. In disguise, Leo attempts to give her logistical hints.
She is discouraged later in the episode, finding out that being under 16, they cannot be married (yet). Her inability to cook is the subject of many jokes in the story. She was originally going to be the "innocent" member of the group, but her personality reverted to that of Yoshitaka's. The authors describe her as the "yuri supplier of the group".
She became an activist for higher wages and better working conditions for her fellow laborers. She is credited with coining the phrase “bread and roses” to explain that women workers needed “both economic sustenance and personal dignity,” according to Hasia Diner, a professor of American Jewish history at New York University.
Tomo Aizawa (相沢 智, Aizawa Tomo) Voiced by: Rie Takahashi [3] (Japanese); Lexi Nieto [4] [b] (English) Tomo is a tomboy who excels in combat sports. She is deeply in love with her childhood friend Junichiro, even though she struggles to win his heart.