Synonyms for uwasa or Related words with uwasa

hanazakari              kimitachi              tonari              yukue              jikenbo              koibito              itoshi              atashinchi              okite              mayonaka              hajimete              nanatsu              onnatachi              naisho              hanayome              otona              bokutachi              ichizon              minasan              kakera              tenshitachi              gegege              fushigiboshi              hitobito              inochi              hachigatsu              mukou              tonneruzu              futatsu              unmei              omocha              chikai              reitetsu              himitsu              bokura              hatachi              darake              suiri              okiniiri              manazashi              futagohime              inishie              hajimari              susume              natsuyasumi              tsukiyo              kanashimi              ichizoku              dekigoto              hadashi             



Examples of "uwasa"
The song was used as the ending theme for the TV show "Uwasa no! Tokyo Magazine".
The fifth volume of "Uwasa no Midori-kun!!" was ranked 10th on the Tohan charts between October 30 and November 5, 2007. The ninth volume of "Uwasa no Midori-kun!!" was ranked 8th on the Tohan charts between August 26 and September 1, 2008. The tenth volume of "Uwasa no Midori-kun!!" was ranked 22nd on the Tohan charts between October 21 to 27, 2008 and 13th on the Tohan charts between October 28 and November 3, 2008.
The manga series Uwasa no Midori-kun!! was written and illustrated by Gō Ikeyamada. It was serialised in Shogakukan's "Shōjo Comic" in December 2006 where it ran until its conclusion in October 2008. The individual chapters were collected and published in ten "tankōbon" volumes by Shogakukan. Two of its chapters are used in Gō Ikeyamada's "Shōnen x Cinderella".
"Uwasa no Midori-kun!!" was written and illustrated by Gō Ikeyamada. It was serialised in Shogakukan's "Shōjo Comic" in December 2006 where it ran until its conclusion in October 2008. The individual chapters were collected and published in ten "tankōbon" volumes by Shogakukan. Two of its chapters are used in Gō Ikeyamada's "Shōnen x Cinderella".
The Loudest Whisper: Uwasa No Futari is the title of a yaoi manga by Temari Matsumoto. The manga is licensed in the United States by BLU, the Boys Love branch of Tokyopop, and was released in Germany by Egmont Manga in 2007.
Based on the manga, a Drama CD, called "Uwasa no Midori-kun!! Futari no Oji to Hadaka Hime no Fukushu", was released on March 5, 2008 by Sony Music Entertainment. The songs are sung by Hikaru Midorikawa, Akira Ishida, Romi Park and Kazuya Nakai.
"Gūzen no Kakuritsu" is the debut single by the band Girl Next Door and it was released on September 3, 2008. It is the theme song for the Japanese show "CDTV" while the B-side Breath was used as the ending theme for "Uwasa no Tokyo Magazine".
In 1969, the group debuted with the 11th Japan Record Award-winning song "Nagasaki wa Kyou mo Ame datta". They enjoyed a highly successful career mainly during the first half of the 1970s, producing numerous hit singles including "Awazu ni Aishite", "Uwasa no Onna","Soshite, Kōbe", "Nakanoshima Blues" and "Tokyo Sabaku". They lost popularity after the departure of their frontman in the late 1980s, and their career went into hiatus after the band lineup was radically altered around the 1990s.
From 1973, Beyer wrestled in Japan for six straight years, in a deal with Giant Baba and NTV of Tokyo. During his tenure in Japan, he had a feud with Mil Máscaras which resulted in a series of seven matches. Beyer also helped promote All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) for Giant Baba and established himself as a television personality in a late-night TV show called “Uwasa No Channel.” Beyer held the PWF United States Championship until 1979, when he left AJPW and the championship was abandoned.
He is best known as the first lead vocalist of Hiroshi Uchiyamada and Cool Five, which was formed in 1967 and debuted in 1969 with the Japan Record Award-winning song "Nagasaki wa Kyō mo Ame Datta". As a frontman of the band, he spawned multiple hit singles such as "Awazu ni Aishite", "Uwasa no Onna","Soshite, Kōbe", "Nakanoshima Blues" and "Tokyo Sabaku" during the 1970s. In 1982, he released his first solo single "Yuki Ressha" composed and produced by Grammy-winning musician Ryuichi Sakamoto, and left the group five years later. During his solo career, he released only one top-20 hit "Himawari" in 2002, a ballad contributed by Masaharu Fukuyama. 
Immediately upon returning to Japan, Doberman headlined "King of Ska", the largest ska event in western Japan in its third year. Then in May came the release of their expectant second album Kieta Kyouken to Sore ni Matsuwaru Uwasa, and following soon after in June they kicked off their first country-wide tour in two years. As a kind of tribute "Exhibition Doberman Europe Tour 2004" displayed photography and videos from the tour and went up in July. Partnered with the exhibition was Moonstruck Jamboree Special, an event that welcomed well over a thousand visitors.
Sarbjit Singh Chadha (born June 17, 1952 in New Delhi, India) is an Indian singer, who is said to be the first non-Japanese enka singer. He went to Japan to study agricultural industry, and there he began to like enka. He gained popularity via the Japanese television program "Kinyō 10 Ji: Uwasa no Channel". He debuted as an enka singer with the single under JVC in 1975. The single reportedly sold over 100,000 copies. He soon returned to India because of a visa problem. However, he returned to Japan in 2008.
Yoshimitsu Morita has directed a number of racey comedies including "Something Like It (No You na Mono)" (1981), "Hot Stripper (Maru Hon Uwasa no Sutorippaa)"(1982) and "24 Hour Playboy (Ai to Heisei no Iro Otoko)" (1989). Director Juzo Itami's films such as "The Funeral", "Tampopo" and "A Taxing Woman" are comedies principally about non-sexual topics, but all have a side story that deals with sex, and features nudity. Takeshi Kitano's "Getting Any?" movie is about the quest for sex. Nikkatsu's Roman Porno series was usually fairly serious, but Morita's "Love Hard Love Deep" and manga adaptation "Minna Agechau" were Roman Pornos, and other films in the series such as "Pink Tush Girl" and "" have been described as comedies.
Takemoto made his debut as an adult video (AV) director in 1998 for V&R Planning with "Nichikan uwasa no bikini gyaru in ōsutoraria", released on June 24, 1998. In September 2003, Takemoto worked as an actor in the bisexual themed video for V&R Planning's Pandore label about the relationship between three men and a woman. By May 2004, Takemoto was production manager at V&R Planning. While at V&R Planning, Takemoto directed a number of videos which were released uncensored (without the mosaic blurring of the genitals found in all Japanese AVs) in the United States by the Oriental Dream company. He also appeared as an actor in some of them.