
I am the most beautiful bara!
You may address me as, Ojou-sama! おほほほほほ!
(Since I don't have a working tablet, I'm submitting this glorious picture of me instead.)
You may address me as, Ojou-sama! おほほほほほ!
(Since I don't have a working tablet, I'm submitting this glorious picture of me instead.)
Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 853px
File Size 132.5 kB
あ says "ah"
は says "ha" (also says "wa" when you use it in a sentence to say "is" or "am." Example: 僕はセブ = Boku wa Sebu = I am Seb.)
お says "oh"
ほ says "ho"
Bara (薔薇) actually means "Rose."
The term bara in relation to gay material for men originated in the 1960s, possibly as a result of Bara kei (Ordeal by Roses, published in 1961), a collection of semi-nude photographs of the gay author Yukio Mishima by photographer Eikoh Hosoe, and was reinforced by the early and influential gay men's magazine Barazoku (薔薇族?, lit. "rose tribe"), founded in 1971 and the first gay magazine in Asia to be sold at mainstream bookshops. Bara-eiga ("rose film") has been used since the 1980s to describe gay cinema. [cit]
は says "ha" (also says "wa" when you use it in a sentence to say "is" or "am." Example: 僕はセブ = Boku wa Sebu = I am Seb.)
お says "oh"
ほ says "ho"
Bara (薔薇) actually means "Rose."
The term bara in relation to gay material for men originated in the 1960s, possibly as a result of Bara kei (Ordeal by Roses, published in 1961), a collection of semi-nude photographs of the gay author Yukio Mishima by photographer Eikoh Hosoe, and was reinforced by the early and influential gay men's magazine Barazoku (薔薇族?, lit. "rose tribe"), founded in 1971 and the first gay magazine in Asia to be sold at mainstream bookshops. Bara-eiga ("rose film") has been used since the 1980s to describe gay cinema. [cit]
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