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Azumanga Daioh (Japanese: あずまんが大王, Hepburn: Azumanga Daiō) is a Japanese yonkoma comedy manga series written and illustrated by Kiyohiko Azuma.It was serialized from February 1999 to May 2002 in the monthly magazine Dengeki Daioh by MediaWorks; three additional chapters were published in Shogakukan's Monthly Shōnen Sunday in May 2009 to celebrate the manga's tenth anniversary.
Yotsuba&! (Japanese: よつばと!, Hepburn: Yotsuba to!) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kiyohiko Azuma, the creator of Azumanga Daioh.It has been serialized since January 2003 in the monthly magazine Dengeki Daioh by ASCII Media Works, formerly MediaWorks, and has since been collected into 15 tankōbon volumes.
Yotsuba Koiwai (小岩井よつば, Koiwai Yotsuba), also known as just Yotsuba (よつば), is a fictional character and the main protagonist in the comedy manga series Yotsuba&!, as well as the one-shot manga "Try!
This is a complete list of episodes for the Japanese anime television series Azumanga Daioh produced by the animation studio J.C.Staff, [1] and based on the manga series of the same name written and illustrated by Kiyohiko Azuma.
Kiyohiko Azuma (あずまきよひこ, Azuma Kiyohiko, born May 27, 1968) is a Japanese manga artist.From 1999 to 2002, he authored the yonkoma comedy manga series Azumanga Daioh, which was later adapted as an anime series by J.C.Staff.
Azumanga Daioh was written and illustrated by Kiyohiko Azuma, largely in yonkoma (four-panel) format. The unnumbered chapters were serialized by MediaWorks' in the monthly magazine Dengeki Daioh from February 1999 to May 2002 and collected in four tankōbon volumes. [1] Each of the four volumes covers about a year in the characters' lives. [2]
Azumanga Daioh the Animation Visual Book 1 Azumanga Daioh the Animation Visual Book 2, Is a sub-section visual book needed ? --KrebMarkt 18:19, 5 June 2009 (UTC) Um. Good question. As currently structured, there isn't a better place to add this.
The anime's structure has been compared to Azumanga Daioh, with thematic influences from Full Metal Panic? Fumoffu. [74] In places it makes deliberate use of unconventional nomenclature; the title of episode 25 of season one is a set of pictograms, [75] while episode 26's title has 187 characters in the Japanese original. [76]