Crossword clues for yuri
yuri
- Cold War KGB chairman Andropov
- Zhivago's first name
- Soviet pol Andropov
- Russian spy name in "No Way Out"
- Nutritionist Elkaim
- Name on the Cosmonaut Training Center
- Leonid's successor
- Lara's love
- Laika's human successor
- He orbited Earth 314 days before John
- Gagarin whose orbiter was Vostok I
- First man in space, ... Gagarin
- First first name in space
- Earth-orbiting Gagarin
- Doctor Zhivago, in "Doctor Zhivago"
- Cosmonaut Gargarin
- Cold War leader Andropov
- "Doctor Zhivago" protagonist
- Cosmonaut Gagarin
- Doctor Zhivago's first name
- Soviet leader Andropov
- First name in cosmonautics
- 1980s Soviet leader Andropov
- Chess master Averbakh
- Vostok 1's Gagarin
- Space race hero Gagarin
- First spaceman's first name
- First name in space
- Former Soviet leader Andropov
- Gagarin who orbited Earth in Vostok 1
- Astronaut Gagarin
- Gagarin in space
- Cosmonaut's first name
- Dr. Zhivago
- First name of the first man in space
- Russian spaceman
Wiktionary
n. 1 (context slang pornography anime manga English) A form of hentai involving two or more females in a homosexual relationship. 2 (context slang anime manga English) A narrative or visual work featuring a romance or sexual relationship between two or more females.
Wikipedia
, also known by the wasei-eigo construction , is a Japanese jargon term for content and a genre involving love between women in manga, anime, and related Japanese media. Yuri focuses on the sexual orientation or the romantic orientation aspects of the relationship, or both, the latter of which sometimes being called shōjo-ai by Western fandom.
The themes yuri deals with have their roots in the Japanese lesbian fiction of the early twentieth century, with pieces such as Yaneura no Nishojo by Nobuko Yoshiya. Nevertheless, it is not until the 1970s that lesbian-themed works began to appear in manga, by the hand of artists such as Ryoko Yamagishi and Riyoko Ikeda. The 1990s brought new trends in manga and anime, as well as in dōjinshi productions, along with more acceptance for this kind of content. In 2003, the first manga magazine specifically dedicated to yuri, Yuri Shimai, was launched, and this was followed by its revival Comic Yuri Hime, which was launched after the former was discontinued in 2004.
Although yuri originated in female-targeted ( shōjo, josei) works, today it is featured in male-targeted ( shōnen, seinen) ones as well. Yuri manga from male-targeted magazines include titles such as Kannazuki no Miko and Strawberry Panic!, as well as those from Comic Yuri Hime's male-targeted sister magazine, Comic Yuri Hime S, which was launched in 2007.
Yuri may refer to:
Cha Hyun-ok (; born December 24, 1976), known by her stage name Yuri , is a South Korean pop singer. Debuting as a singer with Cool (쿨), she formed Girl Friends with best friend Chae Rina after the group's breakup in 2005. Yuri has since regrouped with Cool.
Yuri (Iurii) (, , ) is an uninhabited island in the Habomai Islands sub-group of the Kuril Islands chain in the south of the Sea of Okhotsk, northwest Pacific Ocean. Its name is derived from the Ainu language word for cormorant.
Yuri, also known as Broadcasting Satellite or BS, was a series of Japanese direct broadcast satellites.
The first satellite of this series, called BSE or Yuri 1, was launched in 1978. The last BS series satellite, BS-3b (Yuri 3b), was launched in 1991.
Yuri (born Yuridia Valenzuela-Canseco, 6 January 1964) is a famous Mexican singer, actress and TV host. She has maintained a significant presence in the entertainment business in Mexico since the 1970s, although she is little known outside of Mexico. Born and raised in Veracruz, Mexico, she moved to Mexico City in 1977, for a career in entertainment.
In Japan Yuri is a traditional Japanese feminine name meaning "lily".
, known mononymously as yuri, is a Japanese singer who is the vocalist of the Japanese band m.o.v.e. She's credited as a solo artist for the Eurobeat song PARADISE, a song released before she joined m.o.v.e.
Usage examples of "yuri".
And Yuri had rebandaged his nose before leaving his cabin, taking care to make the dressings as bulky as possible.
Jean-Pierre and Yuri would have swung, in the event that McQueen had succeeded in her scheme.
But Yuri had found La Martine a refuge, especially as he came to realize that the two naval officers he worked most closely with were kindred spirits.
Instinctively, Yuri understood he was standing on the edge of a crevasse.
Citizen Sergeant Pierce helped him over to the corner where the medics waited, Yuri managed to mumble a few words.
To put it in the crude terms of a Marine, Yuri Radamacher had a serious case of the hots for Sharon Justice, and that was all there was to say about it.
Citizen Commissioner Justice began to follow, but not before giving Yuri a quick smile.
Sharon left and Yuri took stock of his situation, he realized that for the first time in years he felt just great.
Because bitter experience had proven, time and again, that the StateSec commissioners who got the best results in the crucible of war were not the whiphandlers but precisely the ones like Yuri Radamacher.
Gallanti to fall into the trap, Yuri probed more deeply into his conscience.
The two of them, along with Ned Pierce and his counterpart, StateSec Citizen Sergeant Jaime Rolla, constituted the informal little group which Yuri relied on to handle disciplinary matters on the superdreadnought.
As usually happened with teams assembled by Yuri Radamacher and overseen by him.
Then the office hatch snapped open with no notice at all, a commo rating burst through the opening, and Yuri discovered that his long-extended fortnight had come to an end.
From old habit, in fact, Yuri had a pulser on his own hip, even though the regulations were not entirely clear as to whether the provision applied to an Assistant Special Investigator.
Mostly it was because Yuri knew that if there was going to be trouble from anyone other than Gallanti herself, it would come from Ballon.