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Cinnamoroll (シナモロール, Shinamorōru) was created in 2001, with character designs from Miyuki Okumura. [7] The main character, who is known by the names Cinnamoroll and Cinnamon ( シナモン , Shinamon ) , is depicted as a white dog with a curly tail that resembles a cinnamon roll , and long ears he can fly with.
Cinnamoroll (born March 6) is a male white and chubby puppy with long ears that enable him to fly. He has blue eyes, pink cheeks, and a tail that resembles a cinnamon roll. [2] Cinnamoroll flies around the town looking for fun and new adventures with his friends, and one of his main hobbies is eating. Cappuccino (カプチーノ, Kapuchīno)
Fluffy, Fluffy Cinnamoroll (ふわふわ♥シナモン, Fuwa Fuwa Shinamon) is a full-color [2] manga series written and illustrated by Yumi Tsukirino and based on an original story by Chisato Seki. Aimed at elementary school girls, it stars the Sanrio character Cinnamoroll and was released in North America by the Vizkids line of Viz Media . [ 3 ]
Sugarbunnies (シュガーバニーズ, Shugābanīzu) are a character duo originally designed in 2004 for Sanrio by Kazumi Fukasawa (深沢和美). [2] [3] The duo are composed of twin bunnies called Shirousa and Kurousa (both born on May 26), who specialize in making sweets and pastries. [4]
Animal Forest (どうぶつの森, Dōbutsu no Mori) was released for the Nintendo 64 in 2001 exclusively in Japan. [3] An enhanced remake of the game for GameCube was released as Animal Forest+ in Japan, and as Animal Crossing worldwide.
A cinnamon roll (also known as cinnamon bun, cinnamon swirl, cinnamon Danish and cinnamon snail) is a sweet roll commonly served in Northern Europe (mainly in Nordic countries, but also in Austria, Estonia, The Netherlands and Germany) and North America.
"I Believe I Can Fly" is a song written, produced, and performed by American singer R. Kelly from the soundtrack to the 1996 film Space Jam.It was originally released on November 26, 1996, and was later included on Kelly's 1998 album R.
The text My hat, it has three corners describes the formerly commonly worn tricorne. Oral records in the German Folk Song Archive go back to the years before 1870. [ 17 ] The text is first documented in print in the Saarland in 1886, [ 18 ] there, however, still based on the melody of the folk song "Wer lieben will, muss leiden".