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The story arc, called "Zou", adapts material beginning from the middle of the 80th volume to the middle of the 82nd volume of the manga by Eiichiro Oda. The Straw Hats arrived at Zou to reunite with Sanji and the others, only to discover Sanji has been swept up in a personal conflict and that Zou has been under siege by the Beasts Pirates.
Usopp’s introduction arc is a nice callback to The Boy Who Cried Wolf, written by Aesop, whom Usopp takes half of his name from. The other half is the Japanese word for lie, in case you didn’t ...
Zou: 751: 5 "Curtain-up on a New Adventure! Arriving at the Phantom Island, Zou!" Transliteration: "Bōken Kaimaku - Maboroshi no Shima "Zō" Tōchaku!" (Japanese: 冒険開幕 幻の島「ゾウ」到着!) Katsumi Tokoro: Tomohiro Nakayama: July 31, 2016 () 752: 6 "The New Warlord! The Legendary Whitebeard's Son Appears!"
The Straw Hats realize they have to keep their new enemies away from Dressrosa if they want to destroy the factory. Luffy gives the order for the Sunny to head to Zou, Sanji asks permission to return fire to the Emperor's ship with Luffy granting it as he already picked a fight with her, and Franky leads the way for the factory destruction team.
Oda originally named Morgan after "Chop", with the character's full title being "Naval Captain Chop" or "Sailor Chop". "Sailor" in Japanese is suihei (水兵), and "Suihei Chop" is a fighting technique used by Giant Baba, a Japanese wrestler. He created several versions of Morgan before settling on the final design.
In a 2005 web poll by Japanese television network TV Asahi One Piece was voted sixth most popular animated TV series. [60] Before the poll, Asahi TV broadcast another list based on a nationwide survey in which One Piece placed fourth among teenagers. [61] In 2006, it was elected 32nd of the Top 100 Japanese anime by TV Asahi and 21st by its ...
Shin-ichiro Miki (三木眞一郎, Miki Shin'ichirō, born March 18, 1968) is a Japanese voice actor from Tokyo. [1] He is a member of 81 Produce. [1]Miki is known for his distinctively smooth voice and often calm delivery in the roles he has landed.
The yōon (Japanese: 拗音 (ようおん)) is a feature of the Japanese language in which a mora is formed with an added sound, i.e., palatalized, [1] or (more rarely in the modern language) with an added sound, i.e. labialized.