Difference between revisions of "Nanatsu no Ko"

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'''Nanatsu no Ko''' (七つの子, lit. Seven children, or Seven baby crows, The crow's seven chicks)<ref name="rloftus">http://www.willamette.edu/~rloftus/Crow%20Song.htm</ref><ref name="bulldog2">http://bulldog2.redlands.edu/dept/AsianStudiesDept/music_ed/baby_crows.htm (also source of the romaji and english lyrics)</ref><ref name= "kodomo">http://www.kodomo.go.jp/gallery/KODOMO_WEB/authors/noguchi_e.html</ref>, is a popular<ref name= "kodomo"/> Japanese children's song written by [[wikipedia:Ujō Noguchi|Ujō Noguchi]] (野口雨情 ''Noguchi Ujō''). The [[Anokata|Black Organization leader]] uses the song “Seven children/ Seven year old child” to encode his/her phone number.
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'''Nanatsu no Ko''' (七つの子, lit. Seven children, but occasionally romanized as Seven baby crows or The crow's seven chicks)<ref name="rloftus">http://www.willamette.edu/~rloftus/Crow%20Song.htm</ref><ref name="bulldog2">http://bulldog2.redlands.edu/dept/AsianStudiesDept/music_ed/baby_crows.htm (also source of the romaji and english lyrics)</ref><ref name= "kodomo">http://www.kodomo.go.jp/gallery/KODOMO_WEB/authors/noguchi_e.html</ref>, is a popular<ref name= "kodomo"/> Japanese children's song written by [[wikipedia:Ujō Noguchi|Ujō Noguchi]] (野口雨情 ''Noguchi Ujō''). The [[Anokata|Black Organization leader]] uses the song “Seven children/ Seven year old child” to encode his/her phone number.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
 
Ujō Noguchi wrote and published Nanatsu no ko in Kin no fune (''The golden ship'') magazine on July 1921.<ref name="rloftus"/><ref name= "kodomo"/> Nanatsu no ko is used as the departure melody at Isohara Station in Kitaibaraki.
 
Ujō Noguchi wrote and published Nanatsu no ko in Kin no fune (''The golden ship'') magazine on July 1921.<ref name="rloftus"/><ref name= "kodomo"/> Nanatsu no ko is used as the departure melody at Isohara Station in Kitaibaraki.
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The name of the song can be validly read in one of two ways: ''seven children'' or ''child of seven''
  
 
==Plot==
 
==Plot==

Revision as of 21:53, 26 March 2012

Nanatsu no Ko

Nanatsu no Ko.jpg

Video
Information
Title: 七つの子
Composer: Ujō Noguchi
Published in: July, 1921
Written in: Nagoya, Japan
Language: Japanese
Form: Children's song

Nanatsu no Ko (七つの子, lit. Seven children, but occasionally romanized as Seven baby crows or The crow's seven chicks)[1][2][3], is a popular[3] Japanese children's song written by Ujō Noguchi (野口雨情 Noguchi Ujō). The Black Organization leader uses the song “Seven children/ Seven year old child” to encode his/her phone number.

History

Ujō Noguchi wrote and published Nanatsu no ko in Kin no fune (The golden ship) magazine on July 1921.[1][3] Nanatsu no ko is used as the departure melody at Isohara Station in Kitaibaraki.

The name of the song can be validly read in one of two ways: seven children or child of seven

Plot

Conan hears Kir dial the boss's number

Vermouth arc

Conan first heard the boss's email address when Vermouth texted the boss after the showdown with her. He didn't recognize the tune at first although he thought it was familiar sounding and had a sad feeling to it.

Cellphone arc

Conan noticed that the first few notes sounded very close to the area code for Tottori prefecture. He guessed that it was a song starting with notes "B A G A". He discovered the song Nanatsu no Ko matched the sound of the key presses after asking Kyosuke Haga‎ what songs start with "B A G A".

Kir arc

He heard Kir dial the boss's number and discovered she was a member of the Black Organization. Later Eisuke Hondou, who knew the number by the tune because his father used to text the boss, heard someone in the hospital where Kir was being held dial it. Ran relayed this information to Conan who learned there was an undercover Organization spy among the patients looking for Kir.

Lyrics

References

External links