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Super Yo-Yo [a] (Japanese: 超速スピナー, Hepburn: Chōsoku Supinā, lit. ' Ultra-fast Spinner ') is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Takashi Hashiguchi.
Wanyūdō (Japanese: 輪入道, literally "wheel (輪) monk (入道)"), also known as "Firewheel" or "Soultaker", [1] is a yōkai depicted in Toriyama Sekien's collection of yōkai illustrations, Konjaku Gazu Zoku Hyakki. He is a relatively well-known yōkai; the earliest reports of him date back to the Heian period. [citation needed]
Whirligig store. A whirligig is an object that spins or whirls, or has at least one part that spins or whirls. It can also be a pinwheel, spinning top, buzzer, comic weathervane, gee-haw, spinner, whirlygig, whirlijig, whirlyjig, whirlybird, or simply a whirly.
John Varley's 1977 short story, "In the Hall of the Martian Kings" feature several types of creatures on Mars with wheels (for locomotion) or spinning windmills. Piers Anthony 's 1977 book Cluster and its sequels feature aliens called Polarians, which locomote by gripping and balancing atop a large ball.
Beyblade: Metal Fury, known in Japan as Metal Fight Beyblade 4D (メタルファイト ベイブレード 4D, Metaru Faito Beibrēdo Fō Dī) is the third season of the Japanese anime television series Beyblade: Metal Saga based on Takafumi Adachi's manga series Beyblade: Metal Fusion, which itself is based on the Beyblade spinning top game from Takara Tomy and Hasbro. [1]
Both the toys and their names were inspired by the Beigoma, a traditional Japanese spinning top.The concept is similar to Battling Tops, a spinning top game developed in 1968, and to the traditional spinning top games of gasing pangkah and pambaram and the previous Japanese toy line of Spin Fighters (1993–1997).
Capsule toys containing products. A capsule toy (カプセルトイ, kapuseru toi) is a type of small vending machine in Japan, in which a user inserts a coin and turns the rotating lever to receive a released toy in a capsule.
Two bladed spinner on a wire wheel 1967 AMC simulated wire wheel cover with spinner. The spinner or "knock-off" originated with Rudge-Whitworth center lock wire wheels and hubs, which were first patented in 1908. [1] [2] The spinner was a threaded, winged nut designed to keep the wheel fastened to the hub. They were screwed on and "knocked on ...