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I Married My Female Friend (女ともだちと結婚してみた。, Onna Tomodachi to Kekkon Shitemita) is a Japanese yuri manga written and illustrated by Shio Usui. It was serialized in Ichijinsha's Comic Yuri Hime from November 2020 to October 2023. It is licensed in English by Seven Seas Entertainment.
As Hazumu adjusts to her new life, she enters a same-sex love triangle with her two best female friends. Chapters were serialized in the monthly manga magazine Dengeki Daioh between the July 2004 and May 2007 issues.
I Married My Best Friend to Shut My Parents Up (Japanese: 親がうるさいので後輩(♀)と偽装結婚してみた, Hepburn: Oya ga Urusai node Kōhai (♀) to Gisō Kekkon Shitemita, lit. "I Fake Married My (Female) Kōhai Because of My Annoying Parents") is a Japanese yuri manga series written and illustrated by Kodama Naoko .
Tomo's best female friend, she is petite with dark hair tied in a side ponytail. Although she sometimes plays the straight man complement to Tomo and Junichiro, she is also very cunning and sadistic, often showing a devilish grin to Junichiro. She likes to mess with the two, even telling classmate Tanabe that she is the only one who is allowed ...
Girl Friends (Japanese: ガールフレンズ, Hepburn: Gāru Furenzu) is a yuri manga series by Milk Morinaga. It was serialized by Futabasha in the seinen manga magazine Comic High! from October 2006 to August 2010, and subsequently published as five bound volumes .
Hazumu's best male friend Asuta Soro also starts having romantic feelings for Hazumu, but tries his best to repress them. Tomari's good friend Ayuki Mari , an intelligent girl interested in the sciences, continuously observes the ongoing development of the love triangle while keeping a stance of watching from afar.
Tico and Friends (Japanese: 七つの海のティコ, Hepburn: Nanatsu no Umi no Tiko) is a Japanese anime television series by Nippon Animation. It is about an 11-year-old girl named Nanami Simpson and her best friend Tico, a female orca .
Prior to writing I Think I Turned My Childhood Friend into a Girl, Azusa Banjo liked characters who defy gender roles, such as otokonoko, cross-dressing women, and women using the boyish pronoun boku, [2] [4] and had debuted as a manga creator with an otokonoko story. [4]