Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Shin Hirayama (信, 1868–1945), Japanese astronomer; Shin Kishida (森, 1939–1982), Japanese actor; Shin Kanemaru (信, 1914–1996), Japanese politician; Shin Kanazawa (born 1983), Japanese football player; Shin Kato (加藤 信, 1891–1952), Japanese Go player; Shin Koyamada (真, born 1982), Japanese and American film actor
Shin (band) (Chinese: 信樂團) Shin (singer) (蘇見信), a Taiwanese singer and former lead singer of the band Shin; Shin, the drummer of the German visual kei group Cinema Bizarre; The Shin, a Georgian fusion jazz band; The Shins, an American indie band; Shin (シン), a Japanese rock singer and former vocalist of Vivid
Crayon Shin-chan (Japanese: クレヨンしんちゃん, Hepburn: Kureyon Shin-chan) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yoshito Usui. Crayon Shin-chan made its first appearance in 1990 in a Japanese weekly magazine called Weekly Manga Action, which was published by Futabasha. Due to the death of author Yoshito Usui, the manga ...
Shin'ichi Hisamatsu (久松 真一, 1889–1980), Japanese Zen Buddhist scholar, philosopher and tea master Shinichi Honma ( 本間 信一 , born 1934) , Japanese ice hockey player Shinichi Hoshi (新一, 1926–1997), Japanese novelist and science fiction writer
This list of Crayon Shin-chan films features feature-length films based on the manga and anime series Crayon Shin-chan. Since 1993, all of these films to date have been released by Toho . Toho currently holds worldwide distribution and licensing rights for all of the films in the series.
The Shin Japan Heroes Universe (シン・ジャパン・ヒーローズ・ユニバース, Shin Japan Hirōzu Yunibāsu, abbreviated as SJHU) is a Japanese collaborative project between Toho, Khara, Tsuburaya Productions, and Toei.
The art book, Shin Ultraman Design Works (シン・ウルトラマン デザインワークス, Shin Urutoraman Dezain Wākusu), became available to purchase at theaters in Japan on May 13, 2022, distributed by Khara studio, and was released to bookstores by Ground Works on June 24, 2022. [228]
Shin-hanga (新版画, lit. "new prints", "new woodcut (block) prints") was an art movement in early 20th-century Japan, during the Taishō and Shōwa periods, that revitalized the traditional ukiyo-e art rooted in the Edo and Meiji periods (17th–19th century).