This HTML5 document contains 202 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

The embedded RDF content will be recognized by any processor of HTML5 Microdata.

PrefixNamespace IRI
n132http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/TkY-pFZ_xgC_HNAWXSsfIg==
n174http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/KsZHwTTmJ1X8WnbeD-Yqbw==
n175http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/m5268hoCy0FopVdhvAYd7w==
n61http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/1oD27PloI1M9UjyNh0FWLw==
n111http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/hMqxxnqb8mftw8U1T187wA==
n34http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/ffh0q8mKUZ3JvD8Z2J9ijA==
n184http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/zYtIqHWYKMxboLIK_xs8ng==
n64http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Lm9ExioCxSswLbTRUAKT1w==
n77http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/6VgJDi2mzjoZ1J-4YTFeJg==
n93http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/LJV1jO0DK_7qRiLpHOxtrw==
n25http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/6t_wHUfwkT4pJ137APfqOQ==
n116http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/yxDn5PhafHQ-ggXyYqHwRA==
n179http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/2sS-7WY1GX_yp-B4xF4ZCA==
n119http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/C1e3jr_5eDvMrvMNqzjDAw==
n114http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/LIsfHJc65ru9dxxJ3LUIqg==
n149http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/AQ8wlqOKZl22dAu73OGMsA==
n150http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/bWLJQmI0OztNwYFBDetU4Q==
n17http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/CWF_ZWJjSJUcGEIIMGxUYQ==
n87http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/XyEQJL73GxsJVkfOLMgK7Q==
n133http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/gFvELPePTpEtUB1bOfcDpA==
n90http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/za0L5fifAkyCaz-CHCnNsg==
n159http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/m9wsc8t-qFhRLT0uDl7daQ==
n60http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/TgOVbXtoSofCtrjpr1F5Hw==
n73http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/4rZRjYztJjy4zXI0LcfyZQ==
n139http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/FUAcRjLjm4IqRAzuoYy25w==
n158http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/JAtpcxH4YyhtRjY93qjliQ==
n177http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/UXGVy6HQy2GUV39nLfm2kQ==
owlhttp://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#
n126http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/ZEKmU1FCoyLjobVxpyKZZA==
n15http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/WPBMTwIqN4GIfFft48hKAA==
dbrhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/
n21http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/vctGNFgqlVvrMehNhZetUQ==
n156http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/HdqQrIRgXjb17BCuBvsdOg==
n55http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/p1DrYG1tFBN8KuWe394T_A==
n72http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/FquV8HUp6n1eISOqmi6osA==
n117http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/PT5wF0QZ1wkaS-7xE4qWWQ==
n137http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/5kkl6S2Dq0m2iCRa2z2TAg==
n166http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/EsLj_iIploBxDv-8FvrYGA==
n106http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/vvb8-2kQwmGtF8yge0Hg7g==
dctermshttp://purl.org/dc/terms/
n109http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/W1nHAYU3dvy9K5B5EU12XA==
n142http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/hmDxQUiWZQDUznp0q5ag6w==
n141http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/vcoBo8W7o-q8bjha83oVQg==
n122http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/6M2yIGanGrNCImvIn_DDxg==
n41http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/OwjOaPC_JqMIthl1s0PQEw==
n161http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/v3chXqfm1Rp7qYtS-9q9Ig==
n129http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/1va59uiVVhbV5HJyGAgYFw==
n22http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/es.animanga/property/
n78http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/7jBsCeHr0M8bPw-Zze0X0Q==
n110http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/all-the-tropes/property/
n131http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/qYN5hTGRxbtT9dorVlWMNg==
n82http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/L2kY98McK_i3YdgINEKflg==
n65http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/aX_HHxf73MixSD6ww1y7cw==
n43http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Hy6njUacmxnfsxdUUo_Apg==
n153http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Eqjfdsr7_MJ4-PP_lFUOOw==
n35http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/spiele/property/
n45http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/3GrtQ-CwpzJoP0jwRm_mYQ==
n181http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/X-en-fBaUA-EkkQ3i4CGMg==
n70http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/JrUzRAXDvkZNSbDb5HUzwQ==
n71http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/ro_fsebSaP59PBIL_A1kXQ==
foafhttp://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/
n152http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/g4qQQP9LUB7BZfI9vGLJFQ==
rdfshttp://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#
n13http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/manga/property/
n30http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/em8yWfX0JOy6fPEAW5CKgQ==
n33http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/TLvFeiAIlgQBUT5nNXAnvQ==
n74http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/d7VhwQysa0qqX4Vf1PuFXA==
rdfhttp://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
n59http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/qm6onMK9B0hE2LOGJv7wqA==
n155http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/PqUw4zWdKXBvmxiQW5AcBg==
n96http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/PlbmwfH-oLraLoI2Mb05LQ==
n103http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/v-M_ZrFU7UHFbehcSOM-bA==
n27http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/__sC1MJkU6dGFAqV5GYfaA==
n89http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Ea6qKyEBJ0gz7Vt2aeKDiQ==
n173http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/WkmvL_1wh_ryVpJqpOYSWg==
n37http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/4QGE1yb8OCUBsHMOAHphkQ==
n53http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/xkMJcKpOg9Qkoo7rs91Ftw==
n125http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/_1ZgkyyjmX_k_R5IpZaIGA==
n24http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/prjHXZb29WPkM2LTcErTeQ==
n171http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/9rGlYtbH4OsuL3drN4ab6A==
n100http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/DyEWk5AmczWCwUZE5Cfk_g==
n138http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/J9h7NqZpWcLfSS4lC-gzpg==
n102http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/HyiCTYABag4AgpfbMjjWnQ==
n48http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/XUC2A3SkXurMsfkXV7M6kg==
n95http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/animanga/property/
n128http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/OXqE5QJ8bRRqMFODo2BDsw==
n5http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/NGxrgUMFTUFmQmVVMvQNXQ==
n168http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/kqNvKmM9PGGI3aLmEFYVaA==
n3http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/ontology/
n169http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/xt2es9dJDPTOWnCxm7Cftw==
n63http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/xTTU_5zea9nx_-0vgsUN9w==
n50http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/JXi48Dr9xvYZDZMvUhhxUg==
n107http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/_ddMbJMovqkcTZfMh_visA==
n51http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/-xyNbcSxA3_uhZVXhgPfyQ==
n154http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/OMqO-SbRQbJljde_FPMCpA==
n112http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/guh3ETayD88ci0t3PuJjMA==
n56http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/dBe_o6pyoas4vtFyoXUJrw==
n18http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Q3_7fTn3mJzZVL5FJLdbpw==
n81http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/_hheiuU58-uFDuC0YkmAwg==
n164http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/6pYOxWKuflmiWjY6fomAiQ==
n79http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/ViVImu2c12w3UFQDwI1_Hw==
n165http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/zQvuSUgYECkQq8wtLFi-Cw==
n16http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/164AQ66boVyd35Qq8eRj8w==
n54http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/lkX1OZVQtnYDcXrBk8KWog==
n57http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/_ftxalwGc3PmriD6khpXlA==
n42http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/j58fJQvc_ulNKE6Vs3hlFA==
n10http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/h_FljxpWDAl0VaM85-6mOA==
n113http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Teea681VB5AbF6dmchCmtA==
n62http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/glpQq486O70I1fGMQPUB7g==
n76http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/AMrHUBbIxOAHb1V7ibOMsw==
n67http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/sk_82lIVol2Mp799Mgxrig==
n38http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/-vQryibMrNOMQwhrLeIXPQ==
n148http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/JbigoQ7AX89KwMLZmXJxYw==
n47http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/gyLWHDOaI09lAELo3WeBZQ==
n28http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/TiQioEO66zbsd5ClCNHnyA==
n143http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/eWYcfXhT1I-980_SdtFCtg==
n140http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/-u6z0UZ5IpDzkXbEC8S4sg==
n108http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Ax1saZ9p-lZinCwgX-7QUQ==
n147http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/aM2cdszIoFXyUsVMjVp1fQ==
n157http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Q4R360M2h-gUugWlzHtPFQ==
n98http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/K8f7W-esmGegQ-CLMNl0Lg==
n46http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/wu6AZaBvj0Ty7HhMXw4nxA==
n172http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/4IcwTIk8uQGLAmplqSSaaQ==
n176http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/PrlR6xmFC4zhcuRfYiienw==
n2http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/u-mbri5vK_PGxzma92MGYw==
n49http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/ROtB-6vgI0rzR4eHJOOk7A==
n91http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/NL4NP1CQPJelq61h67sT9Q==
n40http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/b_UW8x1cJITMOahRRoP12A==
n32http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/V2LDTchFfPjnfk53JEXv7Q==
n115http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/zLNMrWMl66sPeAKbWVcXew==
n99http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/WUpiNF5yxcXVP3W2GosXgg==
n134http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/OfAS-NsVq6GvMeTGrI96bA==
n182http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/__3mB9kJ5dgTE9MMq4So2w==
n130http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/8x6czm6MxQDSCEf-JDr9Mw==
n144http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/GKcNRIoXeQs8xFLshV_bXg==
n123http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/m_H3n0lslzBSZdJ1S9jeGg==
n29http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/pyim9uvYtn7-McjEjo6q6Q==
n167http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Uo43TJlRMivkzC8lf1ADSA==
n84http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/O4spTenW7SK4v5BoQ86pvQ==
n121http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/6-cjk5__DeSAvRWeT6sf6w==
n120http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/V9lG3WAWxIBBPv9EhsefvQ==
n160http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/LiqEak2T6qJvlDaPAeTFGw==
n85http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/iAAyZIS3HPXN5zEkeZCGzQ==
n44http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/qyh0QTrliZY7I53URTlKxw==
n180http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/IRmot4dhKUGJSCWGioqHVQ==
n86http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/K_pfBRCoxxeqzmsLDjqATw==
n12http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/0C6Gz1XdAU49kWa9z1t8iA==
n7http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/xuguHmie18luqp3JdTzqCA==
n39http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/AJw-1T4LKMYvJHoaKSuPZQ==
n151http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/0Jr_dfcS9DhOOHP9WuBBvQ==
n92http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/L1Du0aECbIULplFEFqELJQ==
n178http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Gno8OuqqabjOU0XZXxWFrg==
n101http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/X9uU5LkMage65hHzgx64KQ==
n97http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/NU9tnmVFcTwm7Jvc--QDAw==
n9http://manganet.de/ai_yori_aoshi.
n124http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/48wUGHN_wQ8gR1PtAF5G-A==
n88http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/alVbXZ3ceDipxsjB0Bhswg==
n170http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/126D1gtSEKG4iqmdTPHyIQ==
n31http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/RiInX7l5E-eoMQhJEGYNVQ==
n105http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/NaAjM4WZwJzOsC4svpgIew==
n118http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/RRlUymmuo3B5eXfrJxLzAg==
n75http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/Gr6Xj95pij0y0dSuqqGlGw==
n23http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/TUZr4SBPPzCNzu3skxUhLA==
n83http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/dyd0n7nYgmtyJuOakJ4T9Q==
n136http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/sXFFGLR9ORF8Aqsh8mNgVQ==
n104http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/yi1sHTeIoR5HEn2GqbI0GQ==
n163http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/1s-G4K-h-QXjC5NSu8cfsg==
n19http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/T5vIBjfIVrUrkPkjtOb3bg==
n26http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/allthetropes/property/
n52http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/RjbJGdp1RDx94BMfiATnWw==
n69http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/s1UJ59FoMx6EEn4fNJAttQ==
n135http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/ptTVeM_I8uwwvhFoqbNJaA==
n36http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/oRPwdFqUzpMYqYMNVL6ylw==
n127http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/_kyGtUz6a6Bzsl_6AT5eKQ==
n14http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/-3Wb_izdZZ2D1Ng9H2P0aQ==
n183http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/E4uCs0xGATCPYkwFDTs6QA==
n68http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/BawHUZ2uStf3AgStZeDN2A==
n11http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/ultimatepopculture/property/
n66http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/P0LbCp7OvabENREYu737Fw==
n80http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/RiaMY-W7ua567zJeXjY1LA==
n162http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/RmF50ie1phTzqBqnt-YB6A==
xsdhhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#
n6http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/vyf7btcGUBrkp1lEUa5kGg==
n20http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/I0OMTpAK57HMG0nkOzvyFA==
n94http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org/resource/KP1PdG3f2bEFcZriAPl8DQ==
Subject Item
n2:
rdf:type
n43: n87: n93: n140: n183:
rdfs:label
Ai Yori Aoshi Ai Yori Aoshi Ai Yori Aoshi
rdfs:comment
Kaoru Hanabishi, an ordinary college student, runs into a beautiful young woman dressed in an old-fashioned kimono, lost and flustered in the complicated Tokyo subway system. After taking great pains to escort the woman to her destination, he discovers that she is really his childhood friend, Aoi Sakuraba, whom he had promised to marry almost two decades earlier... Ai Yori Aoshi 「藍より青し Ai Yori Aoshi?」 es un manga creado por Kou Fumizuki en 1998. Una adaptación al anime salió en 2002. Ai Yori Aoshi(藍より青し) is a Japanese seinen manga written and illustrated by Kou Fumizuki and serialized from 1998 to 2005 in Hakusensha's Young Animal. It is a love story between two characters who haven't seen each other in years but were once childhood friends. Ai Yori Aoshi (jap. 藍より青し, dt. „Blauer als Indigo“) ist eine Manga-Serie des japanischen Zeichners Kō Fumizuki. Der über 3.000 Seiten umfassende Manga, der sich dem Seinen-Genre zuordnen lässt und von 1998 bis 2005 erschien, wurde in zwei Anime-Serien verfilmt und als Computerspiele umgesetzt. Ai Yori Aoshi(藍より青し) is a Japanese seinen manga written and illustrated by Kou Fumizuki and serialized from 1998 to 2005 in Hakusensha's Young Animal. It is a love story between two characters who have not seen each other in years but were once childhood friends. Literally translated, the title means "Bluer Than Indigo".
owl:sameAs
dbr:Ai_Yori_Aoshi
dcterms:subject
n5: n16: n17: n19: n21: n24: n29: n30: n34: n37: n39: n46: n49: n57: n59: n66: n69: n72: n76: n78: n79: n89: n92: n97: n101: n103: n104: n106: n107: n114: n115: n129: n130: n133: n135: n138: n139: n142: n143: n150: n153: n158: n159: n163: n166: n167: n176: n177: n178: n182:
foaf:homepage
n9:jsp
n38:
No
n20:
No
n157:
Yes
n109:
2015-07-12
n81:
73
n47:
Romance
n110:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n111: n125: n126: n156:
n26:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n27: n62: n116: n165:
n95:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n96: n108:
n13:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n14: n41: n50: n52: n63: n67: n85: n86: n90: n123: n147: n154: n171:
n35:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n36: n70: n75: n181:
n11:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n12: n44: n45: n84: n98: n100: n112: n120: n134: n136: n162: n164: n174: n179:
n61:
青出於藍而勝於藍
n124:
n73:
n74: Windows 98 n94: n151: n180:
n83:
2002-09-26 2003-12-28 2005
n64:
Funimation Funimation Entertainment
n127:
藍より青し
n175:
Ai Yori Aoshi
n31:
n32: Romance n68: n71: n77: n105: n141: n161: n168: n170: n184:
n80:
manga tv series tv film
n33:
ESRB: T
n113:
17
n60:
Cover of Ai Yori Aoshi volume 1 as published by Hakusensha
n28:
2002-04-11 1998 2003-10-12
n172:
Ai yori Aoshi
n22:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n23: n173:
n121:
n122: n155:
n144:
Seinen
n152:
List of Ai Yori Aoshi episodes
n10:
Ai Yori Aoshi shuutou Ai Yori Aoshi Enishi X-mas Special SuperLite 2000 adventure Ai Yori Aoshi Ai Yori Aoshi shunka Ai Yori Aoshi: Enishi Memories of a Summer and Winter Vacation
n91:
Anime, Manga, Game Anime, Manga
n6:
n7: n25:
n149:
2011-12-05
n119:
List of Ai Yori Aoshi chapters
n88:
Ai_Yori_Aoshi.jpg
n40:
Tokyopop
n102:
24 12
n148:
Qīng chū yú lán ér shèng yú lán
n42:
2004-06-24 --09-29 2003-03-20 2004-05-20 2003-12-31 2005-06-23
n128:
Ai Yori Aoshi
n117:
Ai Yori Aoshi Wiki
n55:
n56: n137:
n131:
n132: n169:
n51:
Funimation Entertainment Geneon
n15:
n7: n18: n25: n82: KID SUCCESS Corporation Hirameki International
n99:
AiYoriAoshi
n48:
Masami Shimoda
n53:
n54: n65: n118: n160:
n3:abstract
Ai Yori Aoshi(藍より青し) is a Japanese seinen manga written and illustrated by Kou Fumizuki and serialized from 1998 to 2005 in Hakusensha's Young Animal. It is a love story between two characters who have not seen each other in years but were once childhood friends. Literally translated, the title means "Bluer Than Indigo". Ai Yori Aoshi anime was directed by Masami Shimoda and animated by J.C.Staff. The series was made into an anime in 2002, with a 2003 sequel, Ai Yori Aoshi: Enishi(藍より青し ~縁~), set two years later. There are 37 episodes total, counting an alternate-continuity Christmas special. The anime was released in North America by Geneon, and the manga was released in English by Tokyopop. Four visual novels were also released for the PlayStation 2, and for Windows 98. Ai Yori Aoshi (jap. 藍より青し, dt. „Blauer als Indigo“) ist eine Manga-Serie des japanischen Zeichners Kō Fumizuki. Der über 3.000 Seiten umfassende Manga, der sich dem Seinen-Genre zuordnen lässt und von 1998 bis 2005 erschien, wurde in zwei Anime-Serien verfilmt und als Computerspiele umgesetzt. Ai Yori Aoshi(藍より青し) is a Japanese seinen manga written and illustrated by Kou Fumizuki and serialized from 1998 to 2005 in Hakusensha's Young Animal. It is a love story between two characters who haven't seen each other in years but were once childhood friends. Ai Yori Aoshi was directed by Masami Shimoda and animated by J.C.Staff. The series was made into an anime in 2002, with a 2003 sequel, Ai Yori Aoshi: Enishi(藍より青し ~縁~), set two years later. There are 37 episodes total, counting an alternate-continuity Christmas special. The anime was released in North America by Geneon, and the manga was released in English by Tokyopop. Four visual novels were also released for the PlayStation 2, and for Windows 98. Ai Yori Aoshi 「藍より青し Ai Yori Aoshi?」 es un manga creado por Kou Fumizuki en 1998. Una adaptación al anime salió en 2002. Kaoru Hanabishi, an ordinary college student, runs into a beautiful young woman dressed in an old-fashioned kimono, lost and flustered in the complicated Tokyo subway system. After taking great pains to escort the woman to her destination, he discovers that she is really his childhood friend, Aoi Sakuraba, whom he had promised to marry almost two decades earlier... Except that the engagement had been annulled by the Sakuraba clan when Kaoru left the Hanabishi clan, after years of abuse from his grandfather. Aoi -- who had loved him since childhood and dreamed of marrying him -- is unable to accept the annulment and tracks down Kaoru to find out why he doesn’t want to marry her. After they meet up again as adults, and he properly falls in love with her, they decide to reaffirm the engagement but are forced into an unusual situation: in order not to shame the Sakuraba family, they must keep their relationship a secret even as they move into a Sakuraba mansion with the help of Aoi's guardian, Miyabi Kagurazaki. Sure enough, almost immediately a group of college girls move into the mansion, one by one -- and all of them fall in love with Kaoru. (Except in that some were already in love with him long before the beginning of the series.) Hilarity Ensues, as Kaoru and Aoi (who pose as tenant and landlady) try to keep their relationship a secret. Ran from 1998 to 2005, with an anime adaptation in 2002 (and a follow-up, Enishi, in 2003). See also Umi no Misaki, the creator's subsequent (ongoing) series, also a harem-based romantic comedy but with very different relationship dynamics. Examples of: * Abusive Parents: In this case, an abusive grandfather. * Accidental Pervert: What's Kaoru to do, with all these clumsy, often-half-dressed girls chasing after him every which way? Something of an inversion in that it's nearly always the fault of the girl in question. Also arguably subverted, in that everyone knows and admits that it's not Kaoru's fault. * A couple of them -- Chika and Tina -- even attempt to use the situation to their advantage in their pursuit of Kaoru. One fairly innocently, the other ... considerably less so. * "Fairly innocently"? Chika planted herself crotch-first in Kaoru's face, how the hell is that innocent?! * Achey Scars: Kaoru's, courtesy of his ol' mean grandpa. * Adaptation Distillation: At least as far as the anime covers, it resequences certain events, yet maintains a coherent story flow. * All Just a Dream: Subverted on two occasions in the Christmas Episode. The second subversion (and indeed the entire episode) may also be an example of Or Was It a Dream?? * Almost Kiss: Several instances of interruption by others when Kaoru and Aoi are about to kiss. * Alpha Bitch: Mayu Miyuki may or may not fit this trope. Or she could be a Deconstruction. Unlike a typical Alpha Bitch, she's not very popular; she's way too smart to be a normal Alpha Bitch; and she's not a cheerleader. But she seems to act out this trope in a deliberate manner, especially in her attempts to bully not just her peers but even her elders -- Tina in particular. Luckily, Mayu's not very good at said bullying, probably because she's more of a Jerk with a Heart of Gold than a true Jerkass. * Artificial Riverbank: Tina's favorite place. * Art Shift: Frequent in Imagine Spots. Also when any character is embarrassed or, sometimes, just witnessing someone else being embarrassed. * Baker's Dozen: Thirteen episodes in "Enishi" if you count the Christmas Episode. Arguably more of an Omake. * Barbie Doll Anatomy: In the manga partially averted - there's not much to see down below, but the girls' nipples are always visible when they are topless (and sometimes visible through their blouses / swimsuits). * In the anime version, everyone has Barbie Doll Anatomy. Except Tina (very briefly) in the episode where she and Kaoru get stuck in town and have to spend a night together at a Love Hotels. * Bare Your Midriff: Tina, as often as not. Has to live up to her job as Ms. Fanservice. * Bedmate Reveal: Kaoru wakes up more than once to find someone else sleeping next to him. See also: Dudette, He's Like In a Coma, below. * Big Fancy House: Lots of them. * Biting the Handkerchief: Tina does this in Mayu's Imagine Spot when Mayu envisions making a perfect lunch for Kaoru. * Bittersweet Ending: Yeah... * Enishi? Or the first season? Or the manga? Enishi definitely has a Bittersweet Ending. To the extent it even has an ending. * The manga as well. Sure Aoi and Kaoru are together like they wanted. But they have both been expelled from their families. * As if they cared about that (i.e. the money, wealth, politics, etc). All that mattered to them was that they're together, and that their meddlesome families finally let them be. * On the one hand, Aoi says she and Kaoru are happy. She also says that she doesn't get to see him as much as she might like because he works long hours to support them. There is also the big fact that the True Companions have been split up, although Aoi says they do get to see each other sometimes. Maybe call it a Happy Ending with bittersweet caveats. * Black Comedy Rape: Not rape, but Tina frequently engages in sexual harassment of the other girls (and, on occasion, Kaoru), most famously her Skinship Gropes. It's nearly always dismissed as harmless, and when Those Two Girls Natsuki and Chizuru respond in horror (at first, before they get used to her), Tina -- and by extension the show -- takes it as if they're simply overreacting, and Tina feels put-upon and misunderstood. * Bizarrely, the show actually manages to provide a justification for Tina's outrageous behaviour. * Bodyguard Crush: Debatable. But Miyabi is exceptionally protective of Aoi, and she has always been jealous of Aoi's feelings for Kaoru. * Bratty Half-Pint: Mayu. Not always the youngest, but always the brattiest. * But Not Too Foreign: Tina. * Cannot Spit It Out: With the notable exceptions of Mayu and Chika, pretty much all the girls, in their feelings toward Kaoru. Especially Tina, who's loved Kaoru for years. * Also, for a different reason, Kaoru and Aoi are unable to reveal their relationship to the other characters. Hilarity Ensues, especially for Tina. * In "Moonlight" and the preceding episode(s), Tina's inability to admit she's leaving Japan to return to her family home in America -- or even, when the time comes, to say goodbye * This is in character for Tina according to the various bits of backstory revealed earlier in the series; most notably when it's revealed that Tina's abrupt disappearance on her year-long around-the-world backpacking trip was the result of her inability to deal with her feelings for Kaoru. She also claims later to have seen something between Aoi and Kaoru right away as a major reason why she still couldn't spit out her feelings to Kaoru even after coming back. * Can't Hold Her Liquor: Aoi, who is near-unconcious after 3 beers. Kaoru as well, unless that Gargle Blaster Tina brought back was a unique case. Taeko, on the other hand, tosses it back with no trouble. * Might be that whole "body mass" thing. * Catgirl: Aoi, in Kaoru's Imagine Spot. Mostly due to her Hyperspace Ears. * Also Tina during her introduction, when she notices Taeko's 'Assets' for a split second she got very "catty". * Cat Smile: Tina. * Cheerful Child: Chika may be slightly old for this, but she's within the extended parameters of the trope. * Cherry Blossoms: A recurring theme, visually almost omnipresent but also occasionally referenced in the dialogue. See also Meaningful Name. * The Chew Toy: Taeko. Which is not to say Taeko is never The Woobie; sometimes she is, especially in regard to her hopeless love for Kaoru. But as a combination of The Ditz and the Cute Clumsy Girl, Taeko brings a lot of "hilarity" down upon her own head (often literally), and this is nearly always played for laughs. * Chick Magnet: Kaoru, although he never seems to pick up on it. * Childhood Marriage Promise: The key plot point: they want to keep it. * Mix in The Unwanted Harem who aren't aware of this key plot point, Hilarity Ensues. * Children Are Innocent: Chika acts (and looks) more like a nine-year-old than like a junior high student (or, in Enishi, a high school student). * Christmas Cake: Miyabi, seemingly. Given her devotion to Aoi and to the Sakuraba family business, it's not clear when she'd ever have time to date. On the other hand, given the intensity of her devotion to Aoi, it's not entirely clear she'd even want to. * Christmas Episode: Doubled as a Shout-Out to Ah! My Goddess. * Was also an Omake and a literal Baker's Dozen in that there are twelve other episodes in the season. * Clingy Jealous Girl: Mayu Miyuki. Tina shows this a bit too when Mayu gets a little too friendly with Kaoru. * Cordon Bleugh Chef: Taeko. * Covert Pervert: Most of the cast. But no more than Truth in Television level. * In Tina's case, not especially covert. * Cross-Popping Veins: Miyabi gets a whole flock of them around her during a montage of Taeko clutziness. * Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Fairly tame example, but Taeko, of all people, is the one to lead the charge to take down the Obake haunting the mansion. Although it turns out to be just Tina's ferret Uzume. * Cute Clumsy Girl: Taeko is an extreme enough case to also qualify as the Dojikko. Combined with her role as The Ditz, this can lead Taeko into The Chew Toy territory. * Chika's friend Chizuru is also a Cute Clumsy Girl, but seemingly a milder example than Taeko. * Cute Little Fangs: Tina. * Miyabi, in a worried Aoi's Imagine Spot in an Enishi episode. * Defrosting Ice Queen: Miyabi. * Disappeared Dad: Kaoru's died when he was five. * Distracted by the Sexy: Kaoru with "Santaoi" in the special episode "Miyuki". * The Ditz: Oh, Taeko. (Especially in the early episodes, when she's the model in the photography club -- a case of reverse Flanderization.) This, along with her role as the Cute Clumsy Girl, can result in her being The Chew Toy. * Dogged Nice Girl: Tina gives it her best. Except, you know, actually admitting anything. Until "Moonlight." Arguably Taeko, who, one episodes suggests, may have been a Dogged Nice Girl toward Kaoru for several generations. * Aoi, before the series begins, when she learns that her engagement to Kaoru has been broken. Played straight in the sense that Aoi gets her man. Mild subversion in that it wasn't Kaoru but rather her family who broke the engagement, so in a way she was pursuing a love interest she had already won. * Dojikko: Taeko. The poor girl tries hard, but things just seem to happen. * Drives Like Crazy: Taeko treats driving an actual car like doing it in an arcade. The maneuvers we are shown are actually quite skillful, but scare the bejesus out of her passengers. * Dudette, He's Like In a Coma: Tina and Kaoru are forced to spend a night in a love hotel (chaste, since they're only friends), on account of rain and having missed the homebound trains. While Kaoru is asleep, Tina silently debates with herself about kissing him. Judging from her thoughts the next day, she went through with it several times -- and seemed alternately happy and regretful about taking advantage of him. Kaoru didn't notice. * Tina and Aoi have each kissed a sleeping Kaoru on several occasions, starting when Aoi and Kaoru were toddlers. Aoi usually told Kaoru about it afterward. Tina, for whatever reason, didn't. * Also, those Bedmate Reveals indicate that the girls living in the manor have no qualms about entering Kaoru's room, climbing into his bed, and cuddling up with him -- all while he's fast asleep. * Dumb Blonde: Tina, at least in Mayu's estimation. Really Tina is quite smart, but she's a bit wacky. * Eagle Land (type 2): Kinda. Tina, the only major character from America, is rather brazen, especially by Japanese standards. * Although technically Japanese, Mayu has spent a considerable portion of her life in Britain and the U.S. Naturally she's the brattiest character in the series. * Ecchi: Sky-rockets to this level in a chapter of the manga, when Kaoru and Aoi have sex. * Every Man: Kaoru. * Extreme Doormat: Taeko. Later, Chizuru. * Saionji might be an even more extreme example -- he doesn't even seem to have opinions of his own -- but it's difficult to know for certain, since he's Mayu's butler / chauffeur and we never see him off duty. He seems not to resent it at all when she says, "Have I ever told you why I hate Japanese men? They're rude, filthy, and simple-minded." Shortly afterward, he asks Kaoru to "please be a friend to Mayu-sama." * At least one fic tries to fix this, by giving him Hidden Depths (and pairing him with Miyabi). * Face Fault * Fan Service: Oh yeah. * First Girl Wins: See also Victorious Childhood Friend, below. * Follow the Leader / X Meets Y: A lower-key, less fantastical Love Hina variant. * Foreign Fanservice: Tina, who's already Ms. Fanservice in a Fan Service-heavy show. * Forgotten First Meeting: There's a broken Childhood Marriage Promise but she wants to find him. When she does he doesn't remember her at first. There are flashbacks, not to the first time they met but while the were friends as kids together. * Freudian Excuse: Kaoru's abusive grandfather turned him into a recluse. Mayu's workaholic parents never paid her attention except when she accomplished something, so she's constantly craving attention, especially from Kaoru. (Does that make Kaoru her father-substitute?) * Gargle Blaster: Tina's mysterious purple liquor of doom KOs Kaoru and Miyabi in one shot. In the anime, it's multicolored and glows in the dark. * Gag Boobs: Taeko's. They don't look all that different from, say, Tina's, at least to the audience. But nearly everyone within the show comments on them. Repeatedly. * Gainaxing: Taeko has that extra "bounce". But just a little. Really. * Genki Girl: Tina Foster and Chika. Later, Natsuki. * Girlish Pigtails: Chika's normal style. * Girls Love Stuffed Animals * The Glomp: Mayu, Tina, and Chika. Each of them, toward Kaoru. * The one with which Tina introduces herself was particularly spectacular, with a flying leap from a bench. * Good Scars, Evil Scars: Kaoru has "good" ones, after all he went through thanks to his grandpa. * Gratuitous English: Tina and Mayu have both spent a lot of time in English-speaking countries, yet neither speak it very well. Mild Lampshade Hanging when people keep asking Tina if she is really American. * Lampshaded more obviously when Tina and Mayu first meet; and Tina momentarily forgets how to speak English. * Green-Eyed Monster: Mayu Miyuki. The other members of the Unwanted Harem evoke jealousy, envy, and resentment in her heart, and she inspires similar feelings in some of them -- especially Tina. Of course, Mayu's all-around nastiness toward Tina doesn't help matters. * Otherwise ... rather bizarrely averted in the series. Even though most of the females are in love with Kaoru, none of them seems particularly resentful toward the rest of the Unwanted Harem. And Aoi, who has the most legitimate reason for resentment, seems to feel it least of all. * On the other hand, Miyabi feels resentment toward Kaoru for hogging Aoi's attention all these years, and she flat-out tells him so. She also feels jealousy on Aoi's behalf whenever she sees him with the other girls. * Aoi feels jealousy much more readily over time in the manga, especially once the harem reaches critical mass with the addition of Chika. She doesn't show it as much given the pronounced pressure from her family to keep a lid on the relationship. She finally admits it to Kaoru later on, and the pressure of having to keep the relationship a secret while watching other women be so openly affectionate puts a great strain on her. * Hadaka Apron: Aoi, but only in Kaoru's Imagine Spots. * Hair of Gold: Tina has no other option for haircolor, since she's from America. Interestingly, her hair is a bit darker in flashbacks to her childhood, whereas in real life children have lighter hair than adults. This could indicate bleaching, but the more likely meaning is that blonde is being associated with behavior that is outgoing and wacky. * Happily Adopted: Miyabi. Officially in the ending of the manga. * "Happy Holidays" Dress / Sexy Santa Dress: Aoi-Santa (Santaoi?) wears one in the Christmas Episode. * Hard-Drinking Party Girl: Tina, and to a lesser extent Taeko. Not much lesser, though. * Tina is an interesting case. She's clearly a Hard-Drinking Party Girl, yet she's also clearly the runner-up, the closest thing the series has to an Unlucky Childhood Friend. (They were about seventeen or so when they met, so Tina's more literally an Unlucky Teenhood Friend.) * Harem Nanny: Miyabi * Hello, Nurse!: Aoi, although she tries not to be. After watching the first few episodes, you might think it was going to be Taeko, the model for the photography club. Or you might think it was going to be Tina, the Bottle Fairy / Lovable Sex Maniac / Foreign Fanservice with Hair of Gold and an exposed belly. But it's actually Aoi who draws all sorts of unwanted attention whenever she shows up on campus, not in spite of her extremely conservative attire but rather because of it. * He's Not My Boyfriend: * Inverted by Chika. At first she encourages her Those Two Girls friends Natsuki and Chizuru to leap to the wrong conclusions about the nature of her relationship with Kaoru. Later, when they call him her boyfriend, she corrects them and says he isn't -- but wistfully. She'd love to be able to tell them he is. * Aoi also has an atypical relationship with this trope: whenever any member of The Unwanted Harem inquires about her feelings for Kaoru, she gets flustered and denies them. The initial reason is to keep their betrothal secret so as not to create scandal for the Sakurabas, but as the series progresses it feels more and more like an outright Idiot Plot. * Hot Shounen Mom: Miyabi's more of a mother figure, but otherwise qualifies. * Hot Springs Episode: Multiple instances. * Identical Grandfather: An old photograph reveals that some presumed-ancestor of Taeko, who looks identical to our Taeko even down to the glasses and maid outfit, had an unrequited crush on some presumed-ancestor of Kaoru, who looks identical to our Kaoru. * Innocent Innuendo: When Kaoru is spending the night at Mayu's Big Fancy House they have some very suggestive dialogue which turns out to be about a card game. * And in chapter 41 of the manga, when Kaoru and Tina are forced by heavy rain to spend the night in a love hotel, there is suggestive dialogue which turns out to be about a video game they are playing. * Instant Illness: When Kaoru walks through the rain to get Aoi, who's gotten lost on the Tokyo train system again, which leads to... * Intimate Healing: By Aoi to Kaoru, both when he gets a fever and her general impact on his psyche. * Jerkass: Of the main characters, Mayu Miyuki comes closest. * Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Mayu Miyuki. * Arguably Tina. The heart of gold is definite; the "jerk" part comes from what you make of her "loving" sexual antics. * Joshikousei: Chika and her classmates. * Just Friends: Sure you are, Tina. Keep telling yourself that. * The Klutz: Taeko. * Arguably Chizuru. (She certainly swims like a klutz, especially for someone on the school swimteam. If you can even call what she does swimming.) * Landlord: Aoi's "disguise". * But really the Landlord for the series is Miyabi, whose personality traits fit better with the trope than Aoi's. In fact, unlucky teenhood friend Tina calls Miyabi "Kanrinin-san." * Technically Kanrinin means 'manager' or 'caretaker'. 'Oya-san' which Tina uses to refer to Aoi means 'landlord/lady'. * Lethal Chef: Taeko (at first), and Mayu. * Taeko may be more of a Cordon Bleugh Chef, or perhaps a combination of the tropes. (I don't recall which Mayu is.) * Lonely Rich Kid: Mayu's Freudian Excuse is her extreme case of Parental Abandonment. * Played straight to the trope, yet subverted in that Mayu is not left as a flat character with Lonely Rich Kid as her only defining characteristic. * Loser Protagonist: Averted or possibly subverted. It's expected than an Unwanted Harem comedy will feature a Loser Protagonist as the unlikely central love interest, but although Kaoru had a difficult childhood and passed through a phase as a Shrinking Violet, he's otherwise mostly gotten his act together even before Aoi bounds back into his life and completes the process. Despite this, Miyabi says at one point that her first impression of Kaoru was of someone unworthy of the amount of effort Aoi put into preparing to become his husband. * Lovable Sex Maniac: Tina, considering she's groped every female in the cast except Mayu, as well as practically assaulting Kaoru on a couple of occasions. * Undeniably true. And yet, at least in the anime, Tina is strongly implied to be a virgin, at least in the original series, and possibly still in Enishi, by which point she is graduating college, and her cohort and former classmate Kaoru is already in grad school. In the U.S. at least, an outgoing beautiful blonde Bottle Fairy sex maniac who is still a virgin at age twenty-two or so would be somewhat odd. * Justified, perhaps, both by her inner Shrinking Violet and by her unrequited love for Kaoru. * Confirmed as a virgin in the manga: while she and Kaoru spend the night at a love hotel (see below), she thinks, "I-if it's with Kaoru ... if my first was Kaoru..." and then adds, "Papa ... Mama ... I'm sorry... Your daughter's a bad person." * Love Hotels: Tina and Kaoru have to stay in one overnight when they get stuck in the city. * Love You and Everybody: In one episode, Chika inverts this trope by cornering each of the girls and badgering them to find out if they "love" Kaoru, only to end the episode with the gleeful proclamation that everyone loves Kaoru. Since Children Are Innocent, to her that counts as a happy resolution to the issue. * Luminescent Blush: Lots of 'em. * Magical Girlfriend: Aoi sometimes borders on this. Except in the Christmas Episode, in which she really is this. * Manic Pixie Dream Girl: Mostly averted. Although definitely a dream girl, and arguably pixie-ish, Aoi is decidely not manic, or overtly quirky, or even all that chipper except when basking in her love for Kaoru. And if Manic Pixie Dream Girl-wannabee Tina ever had any chance at a beyond-platonic relationship with Kaoru, her abrupt disappearance for a year -- ironically, in part to try to get her act together for Kaoru -- completely sabotaged it. * Marshmallow Hell: Kaoru is sandwiched between Tina's and Taeko's considerable chests in chapter 36 of the manga. * He also gets a dose from Aoi, thanks to her more-prodigious-than-advertised assets and her tendency to grab things in her sleep. * Meaningful Name: * Aoi's surname (桜庭 Sakuraba) means "cherry-blossom garden" -- she informs Kaoru that her family is named after a grove of cherry trees they've owned for centuries -- and the name Aoi can mean "hollyhock flower" (which is the kanji she uses to spell her name, 葵) as well as "blue." * Aoi can also mean "pale," "green," "unripe," or "inexperienced." * Mayu's family name is Miyuki, which means something like "beautiful snow." Fitting, given her haughty personality. * And to round out the flower-themed naming, (花菱 Hanabishi) is a flower shaped family crest and Kaoru spells his name with the kanji for "fragrant," 薫 * Meet Cute: So very, very cute. Both in the first episode (when Kaoru and Aoi meet as adults) and in the flashbacks (when they first meet as toddlers). * Meganekko: Taeko. * Meido: Taeko. Chika and Mayu get into the act, too. * The Messiah: Aoi loves everyone, and everyone loves Aoi. Pretty much every female member of the cast aspires to be like Aoi. * Ironically, Aoi seems a bit oblivious to the depths of devotion of her own mentor, Miyabi. * Ms. Fanservice: At first, Taeko, as the fetish model for the photography club. Later, when that arc gets dropped, Tina. * Or, you know, pretty much the entire female cast. * Missing Mom: The Hanabishi clan took Kaoru from her, at age five, when his father died. A few years later, she too died. Not just that, but his grandfather destroyed all her photographs and belongings. All of them, that is, except a jewelry-box key young Kaoru gave young Aoi as a Very Special Present. * Mood Whiplash: The show bounces bizarrely between lighthearted (if not outright filler) Fan Service and poignant romance. In the first season and much of the second, most of the poignancy comes from the backstory of Aoi and Kaoru. During the sequel Enishi -- by which point most of the reasons for Aoi and Kaoru to worry for their future, and to keep their romance a secret, have been resolved -- the poignancy tips increasingly toward Tina. * Nice Guy: Kaoru, once he comes out of his shell. From a certain perspective, his tolerance of The Unwanted Harem is cruel both to Aoi and to the duped girls in question, but it's mostly his own kindness that keeps him from driving them off. That, and also they eventually become True Companions. * The Nicknamer: No one person in particular, but Aoi and Kaoru each have an appellation specific to the character speaking. For example: * Kaoru calls Aoi "Aoi-chan." * Aoi calls Kaoru "Kaoru-sama." * Miyabi calls Aoi "Aoi-sama." * Miyabi calls Kaoru "Kaoru-dono." * Tina calls Aoi "Ooyasan." * Tina calls Kaoru plain old "Kaoru" with no honorific. * Taeko calls Kaoru "Kaoru-sempai." * Taeko calls Aoi "Aoi-sempai." * Nightmare Fetishist: Taeko likes the idea of ghosts and poltergeists. Everyone else wants nothing to do with it. * Noblewoman's Laugh: Mayu. * Nobody Poops: Averted once in the manga. Chizuru, trying to calm herself down and get over her fear of swimming, is shown sitting on a toilet with her swimsuit actually pulled down, implying that if she's not pooping, she's at least peeing. * No Ending / Cut Short: The anime cuts off before the Kaoru/Aoi storyline is resolved. You'll have to read the last few issues of the manga to get a real ending. * It also does nothing with Tina's learning about Kaoru and Aoi's Official Couple status, though one could say that the conversation Tina and Aoi have on the roof implies to the viewer that Tina's cool with it. * Not This One, That One: Kaoru initially thinks he'll get to live in the mansion, but in fact, he gets relegated to a much smaller house. * Not What It Looks Like: Subverted, as Kaoru gets into improper situations, but the girls actually listen to his explanations and realize it's not his fault. Sometimes even realize that it's not his fault even without explanations. * Aoi always gives him the benefit of the doubt. * Then again, Aoi always gives everyone the benefit of the doubt. * Miyabi's first appearance didn't even give Kaoru time to explain before she gave him a beatdown. * Obake: One haunts the mansion, terrorizing the girls (especially Tina) while they try to sleep. Well, except that it turns out to be just Tina's ferret Uzume. * Oblivious to Love: The more charitable interpretation of Kaoru toward the Pretty Freeloaders -- especially Tina -- in his Unwanted Harem. * Arguably Aoi, toward Miyabi. * Ocular Gushers * Oddly-Named Sequel 2: Electric Boogaloo: Enishi. * Likely comes from a chapter of the manga where Aoi tells Chika that as a group, they're all tied together by a karmic relationship called "enishi." Something that would have similar connotations to calling the sequel "True Companions" instead. * Office Lady: Miyabi. * Official Couple: Kaoru and Aoi.. * Ojou: Mayu. * Also Aoi. * Miyabi calls her "Ojou-sama", but she doesn't act the part. * Older Than They Look: Chika and Mayu. In Enishi, also Natsuki. * Omake: One in each of the two seasons. Enishi's was also a Christmas Episode and a Shout-Out to Ah! My Goddess. * Onsen Episode * Ordinary College Student: Kaoru. Or so it seems, until The Reveal that he's the (self-renounced) heir to the powerful Hanabishi clan. * Or Was It a Dream?: The Christmas Episode. * Panty Shot: A frequent source of Fan Service. Chapter 73 of the manga features a Panty Shot on almost every page - the cast goes to play tennis and all the girls are wearing short tennis skirts. * Parental Abandonment: Kaoru's are dead. What's everyone else's excuse? * Mayu's parents are the president of the family business and a famous fashion designer, and thus always traveling. * Tina's parents live in the States, and she goes to college in Japan by choice. * Taeko's father is dead, and her mother raised her as a single parent, and might also be deceased, as Taeko refers to her in the past tense. * Both of Miyabi's parents died in a car accident, and she was raised by Aoi's parents. * Perfectly Arranged Marriage: Kaoru and Aoi love each other, but unfortunately, Kaoru's leaving the Hanabishi family broke the arrangement, thus causing the drama in the story. * Phenotype Stereotype: Tina is American, so of course she's tall, blonde, and blue-eyed. * Please Don't Leave Me: Mayu does this to Kaoru when he attempts to leave her mansion to go home. * Plucky Girl: Most of the girls in the cast are plucky (to varying degrees, of course) -- but it's Aoi's willingness to stand up to her family (and her friends in The Unwanted Harem) that prevents her from slipping into Extreme Doormat status. * Pretty Freeloaders: Most of the female cast. * Or perhaps not. While they're definitely pretty, they're not freeloaders; each pays rent and / or helps out around the house. Moreover, they don't fit the parameters of the trope because what they're really after is Kaoru himself, not what they can get out of him (i.e. room and board -- which, as mentioned, they're not getting anyway free, anyway). When first introduced, Tina Foster appears to fit this trope, but that's only because she hides her true motivations. * Puni Plush: Only on occasion. Usually it's when a character has been humiliated in some way. Often accompanied by a Face Fault or similar slapstick. * Puppy Love: When Kaoru and Aoi meet and fall in love as toddlers. In this case, after many a setback, the ship did eventually set sail. * The Rashomon: Tina exaggerates. Just a little. * Rebel Prince * Red String of Fate: Shown in second season OP, and mentioned a few times. * Running Gag: Subtle, but Suzuki sure likes trains. * Say My Name * Scary Shiny Glasses: Taeko gets them in ep 4 of Enishi. * Screaming Warrior: Miyabi in "Phantoms" (Enishi ep 4) definitely evokes this when she attacks Mayu by mistake. She might be a woman, but Screaming Woman was not being used here (that was earlier). * Secret Relationship * Selective Obliviousness: See Oblivious to Love, above. * Conversely: it really should have been obvious to everyone that there was more going on between "Kaoru-sama" and "Aoi-chan" than just a tenant-landlady relationship. Leaving aside her odd deference toward him and his odd familiarity toward her ... how many words can Aoi go without mentioning Kaoru? * A possible Retcon, but late in the manga Tina reveals she had known from the instant she first saw Kaoru and Aoi together that something was up between them, which contributed heavily to her most recent bout of Cannot Spit It Out with regards to Kaoru. * Sempai-Kohai: Whenever addressing her elders, Taeko uses "sempai" either as a designation or as an honorific suffix. That includes Kaoru, even though in her Tragic Dream the two of them are destined to fall in love. It even includes Aoi, who, according to back-of-the-envelope calculations, ought to be younger than Taeko. But Aoi is of much higher caste than Taeko, and is also both her landlady and her boss, so in this case, "sempai" may nothing more than a sign of respect and esteem. See also The Nicknamer. * Ship Tease: Now and then, but surprisingly little for an Unwanted Harem comedy. Unless you count one-sided ships, which aren't known for their smooth sailing. * What about the night Kaoru and Tina spent the night together in a room at a love hotel? Classic, if (mostly) innocent, Ship Tease. * Shout-Out: To Ah! My Goddess, in the Christmas Episode. * Also, some of the in-universe video games, and the in-universe movie "Pretty Horse." See also Take That, below. * Shrinking Violet: Several characters -- especially Tina and Kaoru -- are implied to have been this until soon before the series begins. One explanation of Tina's bizarre Loveable Sex Maniac antics is that she's still trying too hard to overcome her inner Shrinking Violet. * Chizuru might still be something of a Shrinking Violet. * Significant Birth Date: Aoi was born on the day of Tanabata, which celebrates the once-a-year meeting of Orihime (Vega) and Hikoboshi (Altair) across the Milky Way. It's the Japanese equivalent to Valentine's Day. * Single Woman Seeks Good Man: Nearly every female in the cast, toward Kaoru -- at least three of them (Aoi, Tina, Mayu) from years before the opening of the series. * Miyabi is the notable exception. Probably. * A Valentine's Day chapter of the manga had the girls providing Kaoru with chocolate. Lots of chocolate; so much, it made him queasy. But Miyabi surely wouldn't want to give him chocolate. She gave him cocoa. "...I guess that's Miyabi-san's way of caring about me." * Skinship Grope: Tina is very fond of doing this to the other girls. * Smug Snake: Kaoru's half-brother, who outright abducts Aoi and manages to arrange for the manor to be closed down in an effort to make her marry him in place of Kaoru, so he can inherit. * Spoiled Brat: Mayu Miyuki. * Sprouting Ears: Aoi. Tina also did this in ep5 (see Cat Girl above). * Squee: Tina in manga chapter 39, "Azure". * Sugar and Ice Personality: Miyabi. * Supporting Harem: Made clear by the fact that the lead girl has already won within the first few episodes. (Just the rest of the Harem doesn't know, and for various reasons they feel they need to keep it a secret). * Sweat Drop * Take My Hand: Kaoru and Aoi in the first season opening. In the first version, they fail, but in the second, they succeed. * Take That: Some of the in-universe video games seem to be light-hearted jabs at real-life video games. These may be more examples of shoutouts. A rare nasty example would be the in-universe movie "Pretty Horse," which seems to simultaneously a parody of movies about young girls and their love for horses -- and also a pointed jab at Julia Roberts. * Tanabata: Aoi's birthday. Also occasionally pops up as a plot point. * Team Pet: Tina's ferret Uzume. * Thanks for the Mammary: Kaoru. Not from collisions, though, but because he tends to wake up and find this girl or that one has joined him in his bed while he was sleeping, for some inexplicable reason. * Theme Tune Cameo: In one episode, Kaoru of all people sings karaoke to the end theme. A different song (sung by Tina) plays over that episode's credits, perhaps indicating some kind of theme conservation law. Also, episode 15 starts with Aoi humming the opening theme. * The Thing That Goes Doink: At the Big Fancy House where Aoi's parents live. And it really does go "doink." * Third Person Person: Mayu. Aoi and Chika in the manga. * Those Two Guys: Suzuki and Sato. * In "Enishi," Natsuki and Chizuru are Those Two Girls. Also a case of Tomboy and Girly Girl. * Tomboy and Girly Girl: Most clearly paired off are Those Two Girls Natsuki (tomboy) and her bff Chizuru (girly girl). The other examples are somewhat more mix-and-match. As the two youngest recurring characters in the original anime series, Chika (tomboy) and Mayu (girly girl) could be paired off. One could make a case for Tina and Aoi. That would leave Miyabi (tomboy) and Taeko (girly girl), although pairing them off is odd in that the two of them don't interact much. * Another way to divvy them up would be Miyabi (tomboy), who looks after Aoi (girly girl); and Aoi's would-be rivals Tina (tomboy) and Taeko (girly girl). * Worth noting: Tina is herself a mix of Tomboy and Girly Girl. On the one hand she likes groping girls and playing video games and drinking too much. On the other hand, she adores animals and has long, flowing hair and wears sexy (if casual) clothes. * Tiger Versus Dragon: Mayu and Tina when trying on swimsuits * Token Mini-Moe: Chika * Tragic Dream: Everyone except Aoi who hopes to marry Kaoru. * Kaoru also has tragic dreams, namely about losing his mother over and over again. * True Companions * Tsundere: Miyabi, especially at the beginning. * Twelve-Episode Anime: The sequel, "Enishi." * Unlucky Childhood Friend: Tina. Except she probably didn't meet Kaoru until they were about seventeen, so more literally an Unlucky Teenhood Friend. Other than that, fits the trope perfectly. * Unlucky Everydude: Kaoru. Mostly in the past by the time the series begins. But he had a really tough childhood. * The Unwanted Harem: A given, since it's "harem comedy." Except that all the members of The Unwanted Harem morph into True Companions and thus are no longer UNwanted -- (even by Aoi, who by rights ought to regard them as wannabee rivals) -- except in the romantic sense. * Which presumably makes them the Half-Wanted Harem. * Victorious Childhood Friend: Not only does the First Girl Win, she was the only one with a shot of winning, even from the first episode. * Vitriolic Best Buds: In the manga, Chika's assessment of the relationship between Mayu and Tina. Mayu loudly expresses outrage: "Just so we're clear, she will state it outright: Mayu absolutely hates Tina-san!" But then... * Weasel Mascot: Tina's ferret Uzume. * Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: Miyabi is physically capable of throwing Kaoru across a room -- but the sight of Uzume bringing her a large dead bug makes her climb onto his back and wail, "NOO!" And Uzume, like a cat, brings her lots of bugs as a token of love. * Tina has a phobia of thunderstorms. * Witch Species: "Sataoi" from Miyuki is just one of many "Santas" that bring the gift of pleasent dreams on Christmas. * Yamato Nadeshiko: * Aoi wanted to be Kaoru's since childhood. She's got the skill set and general attitude of a Yamato Nadeshiko, but her whole situation with Kaoru would be entirely different if she weren't assertive enough to defy her family's authority. She makes it abundantly clear that her ultimate devotion is to love, not a particularly traditionalist viewpoint. * Taeko expresses her desire to be a Yamato Nadeshiko, in part to be "worthy" of Kaoru's love. But she's really more of an Extreme Doormat crossed with a Dojikko. Adorable but rather hopeless. * Yandere: Mayu Miyuki. * You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Aoi, Miyabi, and Mayu each have different shades of purplish hair. Kaoru has brown hair that would be perfectly realistic were he not Japanese. Tina Foster has Hair of Gold, but that's almost a given since she's American. * Zigzag Paper Tassel: Taeko carries one when she tries to play Ghostbuster.