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^ Dempsey, Liam (August 28, 2023). "Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Entertainment District Arc Stage Play Unveils Main Visual, Character Posters". Crunchyroll. Archived from the original on August 28, 2023. Retrieved August 28, 2023. ^ Pineda, Rafael Antonio (April 10, 2023).

Oxford: Routledge, 2005, pp. 159–190. External links[edit] Look up Category:Japanese suffixes in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Japanese honorifics. How to use Japanese suffixes Stason. org Japanese Dictionary with Hiragana, Katakana and Kanji virtual keyboards Japanese Honorifics - How to use San, Sama, Kun and Chan How to use Otsukaresama Learn Japanese - Grammar and Vocabulary vteHonorifics Burmese Canadian Chinese Hokkien English Filipino French German Indian Tamil Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Sinhala Slavic Russian Thai vteJapanese languageEarlier forms Old Early Middle Late Middle Early Modern DialectsEastern Hokkaidō Tōhoku Northern Nanbu Tsugaru Akita Southern Kesen Nairiku Kantō Western Gunma Kanagawa Tokyo Eastern Ibaraki Tochigi Northern Izu Islands Tōkai–Tōsan Nagano-Yamanashi-Shizuoka Shizuoka Narada Echigo Nagaoka Gifu-Aichi Nagoya Mikawa Mino Hida Western Hokuriku Kaga Kanazawa Shiramine Kansai Awaji Banshū Kishū Okuyoshino Shikoku Iyo Tosa Sanuki Chūgoku San'yō Bingo East San'in Inshū Umpaku Kyūshū Hōnichi Ōita Hichiku Chikuzen Hakata Kumamoto Nagasaki Saga Tsushima Satsugū Other Amami Japanese Okinawan Japanese Pidgins and creoles Bamboo English Bonin English Hawaiian Creole Kyowa-go Pseudo-Chinese Yilan Creole Japanese Yokohama Pidgin Japanese Japonic languages Eastern Old Japanese Hachijō grammar Ryukyuan Northern Amami Ōshima Southern Amami Ōshima Kikai Kunigami Okinawan Okinoerabu Tokunoshima Yoron Southern Miyako Tarama Yaeyama Yonaguni Writing systemLogograms Script reform Kanbun Kanji by stroke count Kanji radicals by frequency by stroke count Kokuji Ryakuji Ateji Kana Hiragana Katakana Furigana Okurigana Gojūon Man'yōgana Hentaigana Sōgana Kana ligature Orthography Braille Kanji Punctuation Kanazukai Historical kana Modern kana Jōdai Tokushu Kanazukai Yotsugana Transcription into Japanese Encoding EUC EUC-JP ISO/IEC 2022 JIS 0201 0208 0211 0212 0213 Shift JIS Unicode Hiragana Kana Extended-A Kana Extended-B Kana Supplement Small Kana Extension Katakana Katakana Phonetic Extensions Other ARIB STD B24 Enclosed EIS Extended shinjitai Half/Full Grammar and
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in Series No. in Saga Funimation Title Japanese Airdate Toonami Airdate 140 01 "Seized with Fear" May 20, 1992 October 4, 2000 Trunks and Krillin join Bulma at the crash site of the mysterious time capsule and find an eerie clue: the shell of a large, locust-like creature! Whatever arrived in the time capsule isn’t human, and it’s on the loose! 141 02 "The Reunion" May 27, 1992 October 4, 2000 An insect-like monster threatens to turn Gingertown into a ghastly graveyard! In response to this new menace, Kami fuses with Piccolo, and the resulting Super Namekian flies to Gingertown for a showdown of epic proportions! 142 03 "Borrowed Powers" June 3, 1992 October 6, 2000 Gingertown becomes a battlefield as Piccolo confronts Cell. This monster from the future gains his strength by sucking the life out of his victims! But that’s not the creature’s only talent. He also knows the Kamehameha Wave! 143 04 "His Name is Cell" June 10, 1992 October 9, 2000 Heavily-armored tanks fail to halt Cell’s rampage, and now it’s up to Piccolo to stop the monster! As the Namekian fights for survival, Cell reveals that he’s actually an android, the ultimate achievement of Dr. Gero! 144 05 "Piccolo's Folly" June 17, 1992 October 10, 2000 Piccolo cleverly distracts Cell long enough to regenerate his arm. The Namekian is ready for another round, and Krillin and Trunks have arrived to provide backup! With the odds mounting against him, Cell makes a tactical decision. 145 06 "Laboratory Basement" June 24, 1992 October 11, 2000 With hopes of saving the future, Trunks and Krillin race to destroy Dr. Gero’s lab. Meanwhile, Piccolo and Tien search for the elusive Cell. But how can they stop an enemy who knows their every move? 146 07 "Our Hero Awakes" July 1, 1992 October 12, 2000 In South City, Cell plows through more civilians and accidentally runs into Krillin! Goku finally gets back on his feet, but with Cell and the other androids in full stride, can the Saiyan hero still make a difference? 147 08 "Time Chamber" July 8, 1992 October 13, 2000 As Cell continues his deadly march, Goku hatches a plan to squeeze a year’s worth of training into just one day! Back at Master Roshi’s, the android trio arrives looking for Goku! Can Piccolo hold them off until the Saiyans return? 148 09 "The Monster is Coming" July 15, 1992 October 16, 2000 Behind the closed doors of the Hyperbolic Time Chamber, Vegeta and Trunks struggle to push past the level of Super Saiyan! Down on Earth, Piccolo challenges Android 17 to a battle! 149 10 "He's Here" July 22, 1992 October 17, 2000 Stronger than ever after fusing with Kami, Piccolo leads the attack against the androids! It looks like the Super Namekian has things under control until Cell arrives on the battlefield! Can anyone stop this hideous monster?! 150 11 "Up to Piccolo" July 29, 1992 October 18, 2000 Just as Cell is about to absorb Android 17, Piccolo bravely steps in and foils the monster’s plan! Does the Super Namekian really have a chance at stopping Cell on his own?! Or is he simply putting off the inevitable? 151 12 "Silent Warrior" August 5, 1992 October 19, 2000 When Android 16 claims to be as strong as Cell, it seems like a wild boast! But after he launches an offensive that throws Cell against the ropes, it becomes clear that the big android has the power to back up his words! 152 13 "Say Goodbye, 17" August 12, 1992 October 20, 2000 It’s android against android as 16 clashes with Cell. Android 16 is the stronger fighter, but Cell is far too driven to be stopped now! With an underhanded attack, Cell moves one step closer to his gruesome transformation! Perfect Cell Saga (1992)[] No. Archived from the original on May 5, 2019. Retrieved December 31, 2019. ^ Togashi, Yoshihiro (December 1990). さよなら現世!!の巻 [Goodbye Material World!!]. Weekly Shōnen Jump. YuYu Hakusho (in Japanese). Shueisha (51). ^ 週刊少年ジャンプ 1994/07/25 表示号数32. Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on May 5, 2019.
When presenting rough drafts to his editors he used the tentative title "How to be a Ghost". Once given the go-ahead to begin publication, Togashi proposed "YuYu-Ki (Poltergeist Chronicles)" for the title, as there would be battles with demons and it would be a play on SaiYu-Ki. Because a series with a similar name (Chin-Yu-Ki) had already begun publication, Togashi quickly created an alternative: "YuYu Hakusho". He comments that he could have used "Den (Legend)" or "Monogatari (Story)", but "Hakusho (Report)" was the first thing that came to his mind. [2] Media[] Manga[] Main article: List of YuYu Hakusho chapters The YuYu Hakusho manga series was written and drawn by Togashi and published originally by Shueisha in the Japanese-language magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump. [3] The manga consists of nineteen collected volumes with the first one being released on April 10, 1991, and the last one released on December 12, 1994. [4][5] In August 2004, the Japanese publishers of YuYu Hakusho released the Kanzenban edition. Each kanzenban volume features a new cover. The kanzenban is 15 volumes long (as opposed to the original 19 tankōbon, each book contains more chapters than the basic editions), with two released monthly. [6][7] The YuYu Hakusho manga is serialized in North America by Viz Media in the American Shonen Jump magazine. [3] The first volume was released on May 13, 2003, as of January 2010 all 19 volumes were released and the series finished its run in Shonen Jump.