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The nyah-nyah tune features a descending minor third. Play ⓘ "Nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah" is the lexigraphic representation of a common children's chant.It is a rendering of one common vocalization for a six-note musical figure [note 1] that is usually associated with children and found in many European-derived cultures, and which is often used in taunting.
Etymology: no + ni Nouns and na-adjectives must be followed by na before using this particle. No ni has a stronger meaning than kedo when used to mean "although", and conveys regret when used to mean "would have". Adjectives, verbs: "although" Benkyō shiten no ni, eigo ga hanasenai. 勉強してんのに、英語が話せない。
The single was released on January 11, 1983 under the Philips Records label, along with the B-side "Nagisa Tayori", a song originally written and performed by Nakajima from her 1976 album, Watashi no Koe ga Kikoemasu ka. "Haru na no ni" was re-released as a single on February 25, 1994 by Mercury Music Entertainment, coupled with "Camouflage" as ...
"No ni Saku Hana no Yō ni" (野に咲く花のように) is a single released by Gackt on February 7, 2007, under Nippon Crown. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It peaked at third place on the Oricon Singles Chart and charted for eleven weeks.
Cathleen ni Houlihan was based on a figure from aisling poetry but adapted into a stage play by leading members of the Irish Literary Revival in 1902. Cathleen Ni Houlihan is an old and poor woman, a seemingly otherworldly figure that is the embodiment of Irish republicanism and can only be transformed back into a young woman if a young man ...
Lisa wrote "Homura" with its composer Yuki Kajiura, with the latter also handling production.Musically, it is a ballad number. [8] Speaking about the song, Lisa stated, "I've been involved in numerous anime works, and 'Homura' was another song that I wrote by putting a lot of thought into the work it would accompany, just like every other track that I’ve released."
No, an English determiner in noun phrases; No ... "No" (Shakira song), from her 2005 album Fijación Oral, Vol. 1 "No", by Jason Aldean on his album Relentless, 2007
"Kudaranai no Naka ni" (Japanese: くだらないの中に, lit. "In the Nonsense") [a] (Japanese pronunciation: [kɯdaɾanaꜜi no naꜜka ɲi]) is the debut single by Japanese musician Gen Hoshino, who self-produced and wrote it for his second studio album, Episode (2011).