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Anime girl textart
Anime girl textart













anime girl textart

  • In Guardian Fairy Michel, Lady Salome laughs like this.
  • Takane Hiroin from Futaba-kun Change! has a particularly maniacal laugh, especially in her alternate identity as the Queen of Darkness.
  • Hestia from Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? has one of these.
  • Pinako from Fullmetal Alchemist apparently used to do this as a young woman.
  • Luviagelita Edelfelt from Fate/kaleid liner PRISMA☆ILLYA and various other parts of the Fate franchise is a master at this, much to the constant annoyance of her rival Rin.
  • Yukimitsu also dreads the day his mother lets one of these loose.
  • Bizarrely enough, Mamori Anezaki of Eyeshield 21 does this during the field day mini-arc-although, she was deliberately acting as deviant as possible in order to facilitate one of Hiruma's notorious plots.
  • Unbeknownst to Renton, everyone's already aware of his crush on Eureka, so Talho's just screwing with him, making this a particularly effective example.
  • In an early episode of Eureka Seven, after she overhears Renton self-narrating an embarrassing admission of his feelings for Eureka, Talho walks around the Gekko-go doing a Noblewoman's Laugh as he follows her pleading with her not to tell anyone.
  • Princess Vina in Dragon Half, as a parody of the typical fantasy story princesses, often laughs like this in public.
  • In Dragon Ball, Frieza, head of the Frieza Force and practically a lord in his own right, often laughs this way as a show of his superiority to whoever he's talking to, since he's one of the most powerful beings in the universe.
  • anime girl textart

    Although she uses this almost for pure comedic effect. Although she is a very nice, polite girl, Tomoyo is prone to this.And when cast as the villainess in the Show Within a Show, one asks "Did somebody order a Large Ham?!" Whenever she'd talk to Sakura.especially early on in her appearances.she would almost always end with a kid-sized version of this laugh. Cardcaptor Sakura had Meilin Li, Shaoran/Xiaolang/Syaoran's clingy, jealous childhood friend.She displays it at the end of episode 213. The unnamed female arrancar that controls Aizen's hollow fortress in anime episodes 213 and 214 has such a laugh. Azumanga Daioh: Tomo (yes, that Tomo) occasionally does this, as does Yomi.Madame Monterlant in Ashita no Nadja lets out these as sign of how much of a Rich Bitch she is.The other person talking to her over the walkie even asks if she's the villain for doing such a laugh. Yuri from Angel Beats! does it at least twice in the anime.

    #ANIME GIRL TEXTART TV#

    Akiko in all versions of All-Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku, Chieko in the TV version.Her variant however is not nearly as annoying as most examples of this trope. Mitsuko Kongou from A Certain Magical Index and its Spinoff Manga A Certain Scientific Railgun has one of these.

    anime girl textart

    There's an entire YouTube channel dedicated to this trope. Also compare the similar pose Flourish Cape in Front of Face. Male villains may also laugh this way, particularly if they're similarly prim or aristocratic or if they're effeminate (so expect to hear it from the Wicked Cultured man or the Sissy Villain).Ĭompare Evil Laugh, Laughing Mad, and Annoying Laugh. No matter what, the Noblewoman's Laugh is almost always the mark of a bitch. This comes from the custom that refined Japanese women don't expose their mouths while laughing. They frequently will pose holding a straightened palm vertically to the side of or below their mouth, or holding a fan over their mouths.

    anime girl textart

    These characters are most likely to exhibit this laugh in moments of arrogance or when contemplating how they'll humiliate their enemies. Typically associated with the Ojou character type, or haughty, stuck-up women. Rin Tohsaka, Fate/kaleid liner PRISMA☆ILLYA Specials, regarding Luviagelita EdefeltĪ stereotyped laugh used by women from aristocratic Japanese or pseudo-Japanese families, usually written "ホホホ" or "ほほほ" (ho ho ho), or sometimes "お~~ほほほ" (o~hohoho) representing a high-pitched, somewhat artificial form of refined feminine laughter (rather than the belly-laugh that "ho ho ho" represents in English, best expressed in many portrayals of Santa Claus).















    Anime girl textart