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Akiya Anzawa (Born 9 January 1981) is a Japanese retired professional wrestler. Anzawa would spend his entire professional wrestling career, competing for New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) on mainly the mid-card . [ 1 ]
Akiya (秋谷) is a Japanese surname. Akiya can also mean an abandoned, vacant house (空き家). Notable people with the surname include: Einosuke Akiya (秋谷 栄之助, born 1930), Japanese Buddhist leader; Karl Ichiro Akiya (1909–2002), Japanese-American activist, Communist, author, and internee
Akiya Henry was born in London. At six months old, she was placed in foster care with her siblings, and raised in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, by a British-Maltese couple named Joyce and George Dymock. [1] [2] Henry joined the National Youth Music Theatre, and later earned a scholarship to study at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in Connecticut.
Akiya (Akkadian: 𒀀𒆠𒅀, romanized: A-ki-ia) was according to the Assyrian King List (AKL) the 29th Assyrian monarch, ruling in Assyria's early period.He is listed within a section of the AKL as the third out of the six, "kings whose eponyms are not known."
Karl Ichiro Akiya (1909–2001) was a Japanese-American writer and activist for numerous political and social causes. A labor activist in both the United States and Japan, Akiya was also an intellectual figure in the Japanese-American community.
Tomoko Akiya (秋谷 智子, Akiya Tomoko, born May 14, 1976 in Chiba Prefecture) is a Japanese voice actress and former model. Her best-known role is voicing Hazuki Fujiwara in the Ojamajo Doremi series, and Suzume Mizuno in Zatch Bell .
Nise Murasaki inaka Genji (偐紫田舎源氏), translated variously as The Rustic Genji, False Murasaki and a Country Genji, or A Fraudulent Murasaki's Bumpkin Genji, is a late-Edo period Japanese literary parody of the Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu.
Dracophyllum longifolium, commonly called inaka (from Māori), is an upright shrub or small tree in the family Ericaceae that is endemic to New Zealand.. Dracophyllum longifolium grows mostly in the South Island but is found throughout New Zealand from sea level up to 1,200 metres (3,900 ft).