Ayu-mi-x remix album is the first remix album that Ayumi Hamasaki has released. The album was released on March 17, 1999 to promote A Song for ××. Ayu-mi-x remix album contains 2 discs. Disc 1 is the Remix Club Side which contains dance remixes. Disc 2 is the Acoustic Orchestra Side which contains orchestral remixes and 3 dub mixes.
Ayu-mi-x 6 is the name of two albums by Japanese singer Ayumi Hamasaki:
The ayu (アユ, 鮎, 年魚, 香魚) or sweetfish, Plecoglossus altivelis, is an amphidromous fish, the only species in the genus Plecoglossus and family Plecoglossidae. It is a relative of the smelts, and is placed in the order Osmeriformes. Native to the Palearctic ecozone, it occurs in rivers, lakes, and coastal waters of western Hokkaidō in Japan southward to the Korean Peninsula, China, and Hong Kong. The species has been extinct in Taiwan since 1967, although there are populations of re-introduced Japanese stocks in some of the northern streams.
The name "sweetfish" is due to the sweetness of its flesh. In reference to its typical one-year lifespan, it is also written as 年魚 ("year-fish"). The ayu is the prefectural fish of Gunma Prefecture and Gifu Prefecture.
Three subspecies are currently recognized, but their status is questioned and species may be monotypic:
The ayu is a species of fish.
Ayu may also refer to:
AYU refers to:
The African manatee (Trichechus senegalensis), also known as the West African manatee or seacow, is a species of manatee; it is mostly herbivorous (eats plants). African manatees can be found in much of the western region of Africa, from Senegal to Angola. Scientists do not know a lot about this species, but they hypothesize the African manatee is very similar to the West Indian manatee (Trichechus manatus).
The African manatee was officially declared a species under the Trichechus senegalensis taxon in 1795 by the naturalist, Johann Heinrich Friedrich Link. No subspecies of this taxon are known, but unreliable claims have been made that there are morphological disparities between coastal manatee populations and isolated inland populations. After more research, no genetic evidence supports these claims and form any subspecies. The African manatee falls under the Trichechus genus with only two other species, the Amazonian manatee and the West Indian manatee, which are also sirenians.
We owe it to the willing souls
To the white lie
The double bluff and fever
An I for an I
We owe it to the TV
To the motherland smile
Apocalypse and rapture signing in
An Eye for an Eye
If youre not with us you're against
An Eye for an Eye
We owe it to disaster
To the black fire
The anger and enclosure of desire
An Eye for an Eye
We owe it to the sex toys
To the icons of our time
Humility an touch is in decline
An Eye for an Eye
If you're not with us you're against.
An Eye for an Eye.
If you're not with us you're against.
Eye for an Eye.
Eye for an Eye.
We owe it to the TV,
To disaster,
To the motherland smile,
To the willing souls,
To the willing souls,