Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kasane Teto's origins come from 2channel, a Japanese bulletin board.In 2008, a group of users devised a plan to make a fake Vocaloid character. Character names, hairstyles, genders, ages, likes, dislikes, special skills, and other traits were randomly selected from among the suggestions of 2channel users and consolidated into a single character, which would be shown as a prank for April Fools ...
"Mesmerizer" (メズマライザー) is a 2024 song by Japanese music producer 32ki (pronounced "Satsuki") featuring vocals by Vocaloid virtual singer Hatsune Miku and Synthesizer V Kasane Teto. The song's accompanying animated music video , created by Japanese animator "channel", reached 10 million views on YouTube within two weeks of its ...
Teto may refer to: Teto (footballer) (born 2001), Spanish football winger; Teto the Clown, a puppet created by Hazelle Hedges Rollins; Kasane Teto (重音テト), a virtual singer software; Teto (テト), a character in Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind
The Japanese version of Wikipedia gives Hatsune Miku 17,893 monthly page views, compared to 15,132 for Kasane Teto. I think Kasane Teto has a similar level of notability to Hatsune Miku. In the English version, Kasane Teto has 836 compared to Hatsune Miku's 77,889, which might indicate that the article needs to be improved.
The pre-colonial native Filipino script called baybayin was derived from the Brahmic scripts of India and first recorded in the 16th century. [13] According to Jocano, 336 loanwords in Filipino were identified by Professor Juan R. Francisco to be Sanskrit in origin, "with 150 of them identified as the origin of some major Philippine terms."
Mestizos as illustrated in the Carta Hydrographica y Chorographica de las Yslas Filipinas, 1734. In the Philippines, Filipino Mestizo (Spanish: mestizo (masculine) / mestiza (feminine); Filipino/Tagalog: Mestiso (masculine) / Mestisa (feminine)), or colloquially Tisoy, is a name used to refer to people of mixed native Filipino and any foreign ancestry. [1]
Philippine kinship uses the generational system in kinship terminology to define family. It is one of the most simple classificatory systems of kinship. One's genetic relationship or bloodline is often overridden by the desire to show proper respect that is due in the Philippine culture to age and the nature of the relationship, which are considered more important.
The Tagalog disjunctive conjunction o (from Sp. o, meaning "or") has completely substituted the old Tagalog equivalent "kun", [26] rendering the latter obsolete. Two Spanish-derived counter-expectational adversative conjunctions used in Tagalog are pero (from Sp. pero ) and kaso (from Sp. caso ), [ 27 ] both of which are considered as synonyms ...