Teru Teru Bozu
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Teru Teru Bozu
Teru may refer to: * Teru (woreda), a district of Afar Region, Ethiopia * ''Ampelocissus abyssinica'' or Teru, an Ethiopian climbing vine People with the name ;Mononym * Mika Saiki or Teru, beach volleyball player * Teru (singer), vocalist of GLAY * Teru (guitarist), guitarist for Versailles and Jupiter ;Personal name * Teru Fukui, politician, a member of the Liberal Democratic Party * Teru Hasegawa, Japanese Esperantist, * Teru Hayashi, Japanese-American cell biologist * Teru Miyamoto, Japanese author * Teru Shimada, Japanese-American actor * Takakura Teru, Japanese novelist * Matsudaira Teru, 19th-century aristocrat * Kushihashi Teru, Japanese noble lady ;Surname * Misuzu Kaneko or Kaneko Teru, poet Fictional * Teru Mikami, a character in ''Death Note'' * Teru Kurebayashi, the main character in ''Dengeki Daisy'' * Teru Minamoto, an exorcist high-school student and supporting character in ''Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun'' See also * Teru teru bozu Teru may refer to: * Teru (wor ...
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Teru (woreda)
Teru is one of the Districts of Ethiopia, or ''woredas'', in the Afar Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Administrative Zone 4, Teru is bordered on the south by Aura, on the southwest by Gulina, on the west by Yalo, and on the north and east by the Administrative Zone 2. The major settlement in this woreda is Alelo. Overview There are two rivers in this woreda, the Awra and Megale, but , they have "changed their course and ... heirwater disappears in deep cracks in the ground". Deforestation is a problem in Teru. There are two roads in the woreda, but both are in poor condition.Afar Pastoralist Development Association"Document of Afar Development Conference Aysaita, December 15-30, 2004" (accessed 13 January 2009) Debeha hot springs in the woreda is said to have high potential for geothermal power generation. The tallest point in Teru is the volcano Mount Dabbahu (1440 meters), which erupted in 2005. 'Teru' is also the title of a ballad composed by saxophonist Wayne Shorter. Edu ...
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Matsudaira Teru
Matsudaira Teru (松平 照), or Teruhime (, "Princess Teru"), (February 2, 1833 − February 28, 1884) was an aristocrat in Japan during the late Edo period, Edo and early Meiji periods. She participated in the siege of Aizuwakamatsu Castle (Tsuruga Castle) and was the adoptive sister of Matsudaira Katamori, Military Commissioner of Kyoto and a prominent figure on the Tokugawa shogunate's side during the Meiji Restoration. Early life Matsudaira Teru was born as the third daughter of Hoshina Masamoto, ''daimyō'' of the Iino Han (Japan), han in Kazusa province, Kazusa. Her name, written in authentic kanji is 熈 (Teru). In 1843, she was adopted by Matsudaira Katataka, ''daimyō'' of the Aizu han. The adoption took place because Katataka had no children; he had two sons and four daughters at that time, but all had died very young. Katataka took a liking to Teruhime during his frequent visits to the Iino family mansion in Edo. The two hans were closely related to each other, b ...
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Teru Teru Bozu
Teru may refer to: * Teru (woreda), a district of Afar Region, Ethiopia * ''Ampelocissus abyssinica'' or Teru, an Ethiopian climbing vine People with the name ;Mononym * Mika Saiki or Teru, beach volleyball player * Teru (singer), vocalist of GLAY * Teru (guitarist), guitarist for Versailles and Jupiter ;Personal name * Teru Fukui, politician, a member of the Liberal Democratic Party * Teru Hasegawa, Japanese Esperantist, * Teru Hayashi, Japanese-American cell biologist * Teru Miyamoto, Japanese author * Teru Shimada, Japanese-American actor * Takakura Teru, Japanese novelist * Matsudaira Teru, 19th-century aristocrat * Kushihashi Teru, Japanese noble lady ;Surname * Misuzu Kaneko or Kaneko Teru, poet Fictional * Teru Mikami, a character in ''Death Note'' * Teru Kurebayashi, the main character in ''Dengeki Daisy'' * Teru Minamoto, an exorcist high-school student and supporting character in ''Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun'' See also * Teru teru bozu Teru may refer to: * Teru (wor ...
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Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun
is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by AidaIro. It has been serialized in Square Enix's magazine ''Monthly GFantasy'' since 2014. It has been collected in eighteen ''tankōbon'' volumes as of August 2022. The story follows Nene Yashiro, a first-year high school student fond of occult stories, ardently desires a boyfriend. For this, she tries to invoke Hanako-san from the toilet. The manga is licensed in North America by Yen Press. An anime television series adaptation by Lerche aired from January to March 2020. A new anime project was announced, and was subsequently described as a "restart" of the series. As of August 2022, ''Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun'' had over 8 million copies in circulation. Plot Kamome Academy is famous for its rumors regarding its Seven Wonders and supernatural occurrences. Nene Yashiro, a first-year high-school student who loves the occult and wishes for a boyfriend, summons the Seventh and most famous Wonder, "Hanako-san of the Toilet" ...
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Dengeki Daisy
is a Japanese '' shōjo'' manga series written and illustrated by Kyousuke Motomi. It was serialized in Shogakukan's ''Betsucomi'' magazine from May 2007 to October 2013. Shogakukan later collected the individual chapters into 16 bound volumes under the Flower Comics imprint. Viz Media licensed the series for an English-language release in North America. Plot When Teru's older brother died, she was left with little more than a cellphone containing the address of an elusive character called Daisy, whom Teru's brother said would watch over her. Daisy became Teru's pillar of strength over the next few years, as he sent her encouraging words through his phone, whether inspiring or mere chatter, as she faces her life alone. One afternoon, after bullies from the student council are mysteriously driven away, Teru accidentally breaks a school window, which results in her working for the grouchy, cruel school janitor named Tasuku Kurosaki. As Teru begins working for the unlikable s ...
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Teru Mikami
The manga series ''Death Note'' features an extensive cast of fictional characters designed by Takeshi Obata with their storylines created by Tsugumi Ohba."How to Think." ''Death Note: How to Read 13''. VIZ Media. 59. The story follows the novel of a character named Light Yagami, who uses the notebook he found in order to ''cleanse'' the world of those humans which he deemed unfit for society. A team of professional investigators set out to find out the mysterious killer and arrest him, and thus many other characters are introduced until Light is eventually caught. In the fictional stories featured in the ''Death Note'' universe, Tsugumi Ohba, the story writer, created characters that lived in a world featuring a notebook in which names written on it would lead to the ones named to die, typically the cause of death being a heart attack when otherwise not specified. Ohba chose names for his characters in a way that, as he described, "seemed real but could not exist in the real ...
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Misuzu Kaneko
was a Japanese poet, known for her poetry for children. She was born in the fishing village of Senzaki, now part of Nagato, Yamaguchi prefecture. Motifs of fishing and the sea often make appearances in her poems. Celebrated during her lifetime, her works fell into obscurity after her death, until being rediscovered in the 1980s. Since then, she has been regarded as one of Japan's most beloved children's poets. Kaneko has been compared to Christina Rossetti. Her poems have been translated into eleven languages.Gross, Annise (2016)"Chin Music Press Translates Japanese Children's Poet for US Market," Publishers Weekly Biography Kaneko was raised by her mother and grandmother after her father died when she was three. Kaneko's mother ran a bookstore and felt strongly about reading and education. While most Japanese girls of that time period were only educated up to sixth grade, Kaneko continued her schooling until the age of seventeen, attending the Ōtsu High School for Girls. Sh ...
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Kushihashi Teru
Teruhime or Kushihashi Teru (櫛橋 光, 1553 – October 5, 1627) was a Japanese noble lady and Aristocracy (class), aristocrat from the Sengoku period, Sengoku period. She was Kuroda Yoshitaka's only wife. Daughter of Kushihashi Koresada and the foster daughter of Kodera Masamoto, she was the princess of Shikata castle in Harima Province. In the Battle of Sekigahara, Ishida Mitsunari planned to take her as a political hostage, but with the help of Toshiyasu Kuriyama, Tahei Mori and others retainers, she was able to hide and escape. Life In the year 1567 she married Kuroda Yoshitaka; gave birth to Kuroda Nagamasa in 1568 and Kuroda Kumanosuke in 1582. When Bessho Nagaharu rebelled against Oda Nobunaga, the Kushihashi clan sided with Nagaharu. When the Battle of Sekigahara took place, Ishida Mitsunari detained the daimyo's family as hostages, forcing Hosokawa Gracia to end her own life. Teru fled during the chaos that Gracia's suicide caused. Her husband and son Nagamasa were ...
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Takakura Teru
; April 14, 1891 – April 2, 1986 was a Japanese novelist, playwright, politician and central committee member of the Japanese Communist Party from 1950 to 1951. Takakura graduated from Kyoto Imperial University and was a left-wing thinker of the Kyoto School. He was arrested several times under the Peace Preservation Law, Public Security Preservation Laws prior to the Allied occupation of Japan. In 1945 he fled parole to attend a funeral and was arrested along with Miki Kiyoshi, who he had gone to for clothes and money. This would inevitably lead to Miki's death in prison. Takakura however, following his release at the hands of the Allied Occupation, went on to become a politician for the Japanese Communist Party in the early 1950s. References Sources

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Takakura, Teru 1891 births 1986 deaths 20th-century Japanese dramatists and playwrights 20th-century Japanese novelists Japanese Communist Party politicians Kyoto School Kyoto University alumni Pe ...
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Ampelocissus Abyssinica
''Ampelocissus abyssinica'' is a large climbing vine native to southeast Ethiopia, where it is known in the Afaan Oromo language by the name teru (also the name for a part of that country), and is used as a herbal treatment for the medical condition known as black leg. Its first botanical description was in 1847 as ''Vitis abyssinica'', that name being the basionym In the scientific name of organisms, basionym or basyonym means the original name on which a new name is based; the author citation of the new name should include the authors of the basionym in parentheses. The term "basionym" is used in both botan ... for its treatment here under the genus ''Ampelocissus''.Vigne Amer. Vitic. Eur. 9(1): 24. 1885from the entry for ''Ampelocissus abyssinica''at the Missouri Botanical Garden) References External links''A. abyssinica'' inflorescence picture from Mytho-Fleurs.com abyssinica Plants described in 1847 Flora of Ethiopia {{Vitaceae-stub ...
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Teru Shimada
Teru Shimada (島田輝 ''Shimada Teru'', born Akira Shimada (島田明 ''Shimada Akira''); November 17, 1905 – June 19, 1988) was a Japanese-American actor. A '' Nikkeijin'' (first-generation Japanese-American), Shimada emigrated to the United States in the early 1930s to follow in the footsteps of his idol Sessue Hayakawa, where he began acting in theatre before finding a steady career playing supporting roles in Hollywood films. After being interned during World War II, Shimada found a career resurgence starring opposite Humphrey Bogart in the 1949 film, '' Tokyo Joe.'' Shimada subsequently appeared in many films and television series throughout the 1950s and 60s. He also appeared in an episode ("And Five of Us are Left") of the 1960s American television series ''Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea'' in 1965. That year, he also made a guest appearance on ''Perry Mason'' as Dr. Maseo Tachikawa in "The Case of the Baffling Bug" and as Ito Kumagi in the 1962 episode "The Case of ...
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