détroit metal city
After continuously messing up the edits, Umezawa asked Ippo to draw some straight lines on a paper. Ippo was unable to do that, so Umezawa had Ippo leave, thinking his hands were messing up since he hasn't fully recovered. Ippo
went home and was sure the effects on his body are temporary
while acknowledging that he would have to inherit the fishing boat business one day, but wants to continue because he loves boxing. The next day, Ippo went to the Kamogawa gym and informed Kamogawa that he had good results on his exam. Kamogawa asked why he lost, Ippo answered that he would not make any excuses as Alfredo was just stronger. Ippo was then told that he would be starting over and that he won't have a match for the foreseeable future, but would assist Takamura, who is having a WBA and WBC middleweight unification match. Ippo was then surprised to hear that before Takamura's main event match, Mashiba and Sendō would have matches. Ippo being warned to not cross the line to the world stage. While doing roadwork with Takamura, Ippo asked him if he has became weak. Takamura mentioned how Kamogawa was hurt due to Ippo not making any excuses as to why he lost. Ippo felt that he had no excuse, but Takamura believed that one needs to make excuses, as not having an excuse why one loses means that are ready to quit.
Mangas(+18) Hot Manga dévoile ses prochaines sorties
05/03 : Une douzaine de titres à venir dans les prochains mois !MangasJapon : les randonneurs devront bientôt payer 12 € pour gravir le mont Fuji
05/03 : La mesure vise à réduire l'encombrement et d'améliorer la sécurité de ce volcan victime du surtourisme. TourismeDurian Sukegawa (Les Délices de Tokyo) de retour en librairie avec Les Chats de Shinjuku
05/03 : Un nouveau roman, félin cette fois-ci, pour l'auteur acclamé des Délices de Tokyo. À paraître dans nos librairies en mai prochain. LittératureLa série L'homme invisible et sa future épouse à paraître chez noeve grafx
05/03 : « Voir ou être vu ? Qui a dit que l'amour avait besoin de regards ? »Mangas 1 2 Crunchyroll Anime Awards 2024 : la saison 2 de Jujutsu Kaisen grande gagnante
04/03 : Huitième édition des Crunchyroll Anime Awards ! C'est le 2 mars dernier que la cérémonie a vu la remise des prix récompensant les animes qui ont marqué l'année 2023, mais aussi des comédiens de doublage, des compositeurs ou des réalisateurs !AnimesPlusieurs projets annoncés à l'occasion de la journée du chat au Japon !
22/02 : De nouveaux animes félins bientôt sur vos écrans !AnimesSaint-Valentin : les créateurs japonais répondent présent pour la fête des amoureux 2024 !
20/02 : Une fête de la Saint-Valentin sous le signe du partage ! Cette année encore, les acteurs qui font l'animation japonaise, les mangas, les jeux
vidéo de l'archipel nippon vous proposent des créations originales pour l'occasion. AnimesTops 30 des animes de 2023
11/02 : Voici les classements des animes les plus appréciés et populaires de 2023, selon les membres du site. AnimesLe film d'animation Blue Giant au cinéma en France le 6 mars prochain
01/02 : La société Eurozoom distribuera le film d'animation Blue Giant en France dès le mois de mars prochain !AnimesLa Réceptionniste pokémon, doux programme Netflix : on en veut plus !
23/01 : Retour sur notre visionnage de La Réceptionniste pokémon, nouvelle série
animée en stop-motion par le studio Dwarf, absolument adorable.
2Films 5Reception and legacy 6Notes 7References 8External links Toggle the table of contents
Sailor Moon (TV series) 10 languages বাংলাБългарскиΕλληνικά한국어Italiano日本語РусскийไทยTiếng Việt吴语 Edit links ArticleTalk English ReadEditView history Tools Tools move to sidebar hide Actions ReadEditView history General What links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPermanent linkPage informationCite this pageGet shortened URLDownload QR codeWikidata item Print/export Download as PDFPrintable version From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article is about the 1992 television anime series. For the 2003 live action series, see Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon (2003 TV series). For the 2014 web series, see Sailor Moon Crystal. 1992 television anime directed by Junichi Sato, Takuya Igarashi and Kunihiko Ikuhara Sailor Moon美少女戦士セーラームーン
(Bishōjo Senshi Sērā Mūn)GenreMagical girl Anime television seriesDirected byJunichi Sato (season 1)Kunihiko Ikuhara (R–SuperS)Takuya Igarashi (Sailor Stars)Produced byIriya Azuma (season 1–SuperS)Kenji ŌtaToshihiko
Arisako (SuperS–Sailor Stars)Kōichi Yada (SuperS–Sailor Stars)Written bySukehiro Tomita (season 1–S)Yōji Enokido (SuperS)Ryōta Yamaguchi (Sailor Stars)Music byTakanori ArisawaStudioToei AnimationLicensed byAUS: Crunchyroll[a]CA: Wow Unlimited MediaUS: Viz MediaOriginal networkTV AsahiEnglish networkAU: ABC, Seven Network, Network Ten, Fox KidsCA: YTV, GlobalIE: Fox Kids, RTÉ2NZ: TV2PH: ABC 5, ABS-CBN, A2ZUK: Fox Kids, GMTV, Tiny PopUS: Cartoon Network, (Toonami), Syndication Seasons5 Original run March 7, 1992 (1992-03-07) – February 8, 1997 (1997-02-08)Episodes200 + 3 TV Specials (List of episodes) Anime film series Sailor Moon R: The Movie (1993) Sailor Moon S: The Movie (1994) Sailor Moon SuperS: The Movie (1995) Anime and manga portal Sailor Moon,[1][2] originally released in Japan as Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon (Japanese: 美少女戦士セーラームーン, Hepburn: Bishōjo Senshi Sērā Mūn) and later as Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon,[3] is a Japanese superhero anime television series produced by Toei Animation using Super Sentai motifs. It is based on the manga of the same title written by Naoko Takeuchi that was published from 1991 to 1997 in Nakayoshi. Sailor Moon first aired in Japan on TV Asahi from March 7, 1992, to February 8, 1997, and was dubbed for release in various regions around the world, including North America, Southeast Asia, Greater China, Australia, Europe, and Latin America. The series follows the adventures of the titular protagonist whose name is Usagi Tsukino, a middle school student who is given the power to become a Pretty Soldier. Joined by other Sailor Soldiers, she defends Earth against an assortment of evil villains. The anime also parallels the maturation of Usagi from an emotional middle school girl to a responsible young adult. Following the success of the anime in the United States, the manga comprising its story was released there by Tokyopop. Sailor Moon's popularity has spawned numerous additional media based on its universe, including films, video games, and soundtracks.