AMI or Ami or AmI may refer to:
Ami is a given name of Hebrew, Japanese, and Indian origins.
Ami is a genus of tarantula spiders of South and Central America.
The body lengths of the species range from 17 to 21 mm.
The genus is named after a word in the Tupí language, meaning "spider that does not spin a web". A. caxiuana is named after the type locality, which means "place of many snakes" in Tupí; A. yupanquii is named after the Inca leader Tupac Yupanqui, who unified the agricultural populations of Ecuador; A. bladesi received its name in honor of Panamanian singer and composer Ruben Blades. A. pijaos honors the Pijaos, an ancient culture that populated the region of the type locality. A. amazonica refers to the Colombian amazonic region. A. weinmanni is named after Dirk Weinmann, the collector of the type specimens.
Ami seems to more Pseudhapalopus than to other genera of the large subfamily Theraphosinae. It is also similar to the small brownish genera Cyclosternum and Reversopelma.
Hana may refer to :
"Hana" (花, literally "Flower") is the ninth single by the Japanese band Orange Range. It was released on October 20, 2004. "Hana" was used as the ending theme of the Japanese movie Ima, Ai ni Yukimasu.
"Hana" stayed at number one for many weeks and stayed on the charts for over 50 weeks, to date the most successful single from this group.
"Hana (Mémento Mori) (花 -Mémento-Mori-)" is the eleventh single by the Japanese rock band Mr. Children.
The song was released as one of the lead-off singles from the album Shinkai on April 10, 1996 on only 500 yen, because its compact disc not contains any B-Sides or Karaoke versions. Like the previous materials, "Hana" also debuted at the number-one on the Japanese Oricon chart, and remained the peak position for a couple of weeks, finally selling more than 1.5 million copies.
The Latin subtitle of the song which means "think about the death" was named after the photo book that made songwriter impressed, which was taken and edited by Shinya Fujiwara. When the re-recorded version of the song was featured on B-side of a single "Yasashii Uta" released in 2001, its alternative title was omitted.
All songs written and composed by Kazutoshi Sakurai.