. . "It is August. Or rather the last day of July to the first day of September, a k a Forgotten Summer Vacation Homework time. How do we know? Because distinguished anime artists show us an Establishing Shot with this green, noisy, bug-eyed bug striding a tree with the student yawning in a distant window. Although sometimes we see an extreme closeup of the goggle-eyed critter in an Aspect Montage -- whereupon it normally falls off the tree to show that even it has fainted from the heat. Something of a cultural gap between Asia and the West because cicadas appear every year in the former while many cicada broods in North America cycle at absurdly long intervals (13 and 17 years being common). Thus, children in some areas may not have been exposed to this particular occurrence until midway or later in childhood. Traditionally, the sound effect used in manga to represent cicadas chirping is \u300C\u30DF\u30FC\u30FC\u30F3 \u30DF\u30FC\u30F3 \u30DF\u30FC\u30F3 \u30DF\u30FC\u30F3 \u30DF\u30FC\u30F3\u300D (miiiiin miin miin miin miin). See also Chirping Crickets. Examples of Cicadian Rhythm include:"@en . . . . . . "It is August. Or rather the last day of July to the first day of September, a k a Forgotten Summer Vacation Homework time. How do we know? Because distinguished anime artists show us an Establishing Shot with this green, noisy, bug-eyed bug striding a tree with the student yawning in a distant window. Although sometimes we see an extreme closeup of the goggle-eyed critter in an Aspect Montage -- whereupon it normally falls off the tree to show that even it has fainted from the heat. See also Chirping Crickets. Examples of Cicadian Rhythm include:"@en . . . . . . . . . "Cicadian Rhythm"@en . . . . . .