Ojamajo Doremi Sharp

Ojamajo Doremi Sharp 4,3/5 1621 votes

Ojamajo Doremi Sharp – Episode 2. Posted on July 27, 2019 by Bobduh. Heck yeah folks, it’s time for more Ojamajo Doremi! The Doremi sequel’s first episode was largely taken up by reintroductions and the establishing of a new hook, as our heroines’ despair at relinquishing their wands was soon replaced by trepidation at the idea of. 50 rows  Episode No. Opening Clip Name Summary 1 Doremi Becomes a Mom!? After the ojamajo go.

's from 1999 to 2003, spanning four year-long television series, with an extra series airing in 2005.Ojamajo Doremi (Ojamajo being a of 'ojama', meaning a hindrance and 'majo', meaning witch) tells the story of Doremi Harukaze, the self-proclaimed ', who dreams of becoming a witch just like in the stories she reads. One day she stumbles across a mysterious shop run by an old woman who fits the profile of a witch to a tee. Doremi calls her out on it, and suddenly the woman transforms into an ugly little frog thing: turns out she really was a witch, and this is what happens when a human correctly identifies one.The ex-witch, Majo Rika, takes her on as an apprentice witch so that Doremi can eventually gain enough magical power to change her back. The thing is, Doremi is when it comes to learning the trade, which leads to Majo Rika branding her an ojamajo. Not soon afterwards, Doremi's two friends and get in on the act, and in the latter half of the series, - another apprentice witch who uses magic for selfish reasons- turns up as an antagonist of sorts.

In the second series ( Ojamajo Doremi # (Sharp)), and Doremi gains a magical 'daughter' called Hana that. The third series ( Motto!

Ojamajo Doremi) introduces American witch apprentice Momoko Asuka to help the group pass a test to become formal witches. This test involves turning their shop into a bakery for the season. The fourth and final television series ( Ojamajo Doremi Dokkan!) has Hana to the same age as Doremi so she can attend school with her 'mommy'.

A fifth series followed ( Ojamajo Doremi Na-i-sho) that was set during Motto and focused on various secrets held by the main characters.The franchise was a massively popular series in Japan; notably, it's the third longest series to date behind and, but unlike the two other touchstone series, the show takes place in a single continuity. The series has been dubbed into several languages and released in multiple countries under the name Magical DoReMi. In America it was licensed by, becoming the first version not to call the main character 'Doremi' (instead they called her Dorie, turning Hazuki and Aiko into Reanne and Mirabelle respectively to retain the pun in the title). While the first twenty-six episodes were aired on television, the last twenty-five were only available online.In 2011, Kodansha began publishing a series of trilogies under the title Ojamajo Doremi 16.

The novels were penned by Midori Kuriyama, the series' main episode writer, with illustrations provided by Yoshihiko Umakoshi, the original series' character designer. The story take place years after the ending of the original anime series, where Doremi is now a high school student. The stories are written in the same episodic format as the television series, dealing with problems in both Doremi's personal life and affairs in the Witch World. After the release of Ojamajo Doremi 16 Come On!, the novel continued on as a second trilogy titled Ojamajo Doremi 17, and later a third titled Ojamajo Doremi 18. The LN series reached its conclusion with Ojamajo Doremi 19.In 2019, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the series, there's an original net animation called Ojamajo Doremi: Comedy Theater that features chibi versions of the character designs light novel series. Also there's going to be another light novel called Ojamajo Doremi 20, written by Yumi Kageyama.This series has a And now it has a in the works.This series contains examples of.: The writers forgot that the girls had yet to collect all the bad cards in the first season.

Luckily, they tied this arc up in season two.: Many characters get focus episodes to help them with. This includes in Doremi's class.

Several of those characters even get it multiple times!.: The Latin American and European dubs keep the characters' Japanese ethnicity ambiguous, but the English dub blatantly changes the setting from Japan to North America by renaming the characters and locations with Western names. The South Korean dub also changes the characters to Korean to comply with national broadcasting regulations, as blatantly Japanese content could not be aired on certain channels due to political tension between the two countries.: The title, Ojamajo Doremi, directly translates into 'Troublesome Witch Doremi.' .:. Happens frequently during Sharp. You have an evil man with magical powers who will stop at nothing to take away your child. He will even go as far as. Losing a child happens several times in the series, and since witches live very long, it's generally expected that they'd outlive their kids if they marry a human man and bear his children.

Kids run away from home a bit due to being upset at their parents. You almost couldn't blame the girls from being worried about Hana in Dokkan, even when Majorika and Lala tell them that they were being overbearing.

Nagato's parents are stunned when they learn their daughter overheard them fighting about her. It can come off as them arguing over a mentally disabled child, since Nagato mentioned she was a slow worker.: Unlike a lot of children's anime, not only do the parents and teachers provide a major support network, but are often shown to be just as developed as the main kid characters. They can slip into this trope,.: Everyone else's names are common Japanese names except for Doremi, Pop, and Onpu. Note These names all have; Doremi's name refers to the first three notes of the musical scale, Pop's name likely refers to, and Onpu's name means 'musical note'. Likewise, the names of people who live in New York are common as well, with Momoko being the Aerith while living there.: If someone were to die in this show, they're all but assured to remain dead.

Sure, there is magic to bring people, but doing so will cost the caster her life upon success. For that reason, that magic is forbidden and thus hasn't been used successfully onscreen. Ever.: in Series 1 and Sharp, the girls go through hardship after hardship to pass the tests and become full fledged Witches.and then have to give them up to save someone: Onpu in the former and Hana in the latter.:. Masaru Yada, though he's more rather than actually 'bad'.

Akatsuki during Sharp, though he kept his anti-villainous tendencies concealed until. The man Onpu daydreamed about in Naisho episode 10 is depicted as being bad.: Who is this Majorhythm? How come I haven't heard of Rhythm Makihatayama?

You mean, she's just in the game? Oh.: Magical Stage. All Ojamajos who are present (except Hana for all but the penultimate one) need to be resent just to use this spell. In Sharp, gives the girls a set of Calls that would let them do this even when separate.:.

Reika Tamaki, also the resident. Momoko is actually able to relate and make friends with her due to being similar to a friend in America, Mary. She also gives an excellent lampshading. Momoko: I really don't like people like Tamaki-san, but you see her type no matter which country's school you are in.: as she is, Tamaki isn't completely evil either.

Her in the first season has her going through an when she doubts that her truly loves her and bonding with Shiori. She gains even more sympathetic development during Motto, where her self-centered and bratty behavior is revealed to be caused by her loneliness and insecurity. Momoko sees through this and becomes close friends with her, and also helps others to see Reika's true self. Erika, Reika's cousin, antagonizes Pop and her friends. Like her sister, she becomes a later in Dokkan.: Played with. In the first half of the series, the main characters are in class 2.

However, there's a student shuffle in the third season that splits up the girls — Doremi (later joined by Momoko and Hana) is in class 1 with her regular teacher Seki; Hazuki, Aiko, and Onpu stay in class 2 but get a new teacher in Nishizawa.: Pop antagonizes Doremi throughout the first half of the first season, often considering herself better than her older sibling. She starting when she gets her magic.: Doremi and the other girls throughout the series are under the tutelage of various Witches. They technically avert this whenever they either become full-fledged Witches or have to give up being Witches.: The girls change outfits and get taller in the second half of the series, but the overall designs get better in the second half of Sharp.: The ending for Naisho depicts the girls in a simplified, roughly-drawn art style with a noticeable, almost to the point of.: Ojamajo Doremi is a show targeted towards little girls, but Ojamajo Doremi 16 is targeted to people who grew up with the show. Also, since the 15th anniversary of Ojamajo Doremi, Bandai has been releasing Doremi-themed products for adult women, such as make-up and jewelry accessories.: In one episode, Hazuki is devastated when she gets a 'Try Harder' grade on her report card even though all of her other grades were outstanding.: Lala in Ojamajo Doremi Sharp ep. 16; Hazuki and Aiko in Ojamajo Doremi Dokkan!

The latter is because the twosome had to eat Doremi's and Hana's meals in addition to their own due to an emergency on Hana's part.: Hazuki's kidnappers in episode 19 of the first season threatened her with a trick gun, which they also believed was real until it was fired.: Isn't Momoko's outfit pretty risque for 5th-6th grade girls!? Not to mention Hana-chan's 'Commander Hana' costume!.: Akatsuki in Sharp started off by getting close to Doremi for the sole purpose of using her to get to Hana.

Eventually, he developed genuine feelings towards her and ultimately made his.: Happens a lot between Doremi and Kotake, as they're often at odds with each other. However, they occasionally do have an moment.: Doremi, Hazuki, and Aiko durin first season, respectively. Doremi refers to herself as 'the world's unluckiest girl', Hazuki is legitimately intelligent and consistently makes good grades throughout the show, and Aiko is the athletic one.: Applies to on the show.

Elaborating would take a lot of space.:, the previous Witch Queen.:. In episode 14 of Dokkan, Doremi saves Hana from certain death at the of a plant monster.

Done a lot in Sharp when the girls are rescuing Hana.: Female example in Aiko, though she also doubled as during the first season before Onpu made her. She still lapses back into the role from time to time.: Their, Seki-sensei.: Hazuki gets this on Valentine's Day in Naisho.: The first two seasons. Especially the first. ( Right after they've become full-fledged witches, Onpu falls into a as hits her for repeatedly using her powers for mind control (even when, that particular time, she had actually used them to save herself and the others), so Doremi and the other girls have to practically give up everything to save her). And in the penultimate episode; the girls must chose between becoming witches, or stay human but leaving Hana and the Witch World until she become the great Queen.: Hana-chan typically has these (particularly during Sharp and Motto). Other characters get them too from time to time.: In the first episode, Doremi is reading a book about witchcraft hidden inside a reading book in class.

She humiliates herself by accidentally reading from the witch book when asked to read from a page.: Twice. Once during the beginning and end of the first season, and again at the end of the series.:. An episode of the Naisho ends with Seki-sensei chewing out the anchor leg of her room's opponents in a swimming relay for not trying as hard as Aiko.

One, the opponents won that race, and two, after all her hard practicing, Aiko didn't even compete. The entirety of the, for a multitude of reasons:. The girls leaving their 'daughter' Hana ensures that Hana would eventually outlive the other girls by a huge margin if without any accidents (Episode 13 of Naisho is an indication). The whole deal was resolved too cheaply and swiftly, as if they had forgotten about the former Witch Queen already. Surely since And they were still expecting so in the light novels: After Hana was claimed to have been extremely badly-behaved, Doremi's first thought was that it was unnatural and something must have happened. Ironically, Doremi's guess turned out correct.

The girls' decision about giving up magic and the justification they came up with without further thinking or asking are flawed. Their decision to stay in the human world doesn't necessarily mean they had to give up magical powers, and to make more people accept magic, you have to prove its existence first. Note Even if excluding the examples of Majo Rika et al.

Who returned to the Witch World after the anime, Mirai in Dokkan episode 40—yes, THAT episode—still proves this point The greatest flaw is the girls' realization that they can solve their problems without magic. 'Dokkan' episode 33 evidently mentions that magic isn't just a 'cheap means of solving problems', but instead the 'lifeline' of you and the people you love in critical cases. The Witch Queen's stand about using magic properly, implying that only when humanity becomes that of friendship can humans get access to magic. Putting aside that by then even social regulations might already be a redundancy,? Remember the wizards before their?

Remember the former Witch Queen? In fact, the magical worlds themselves are also riddled with atrocities commonplace in typical monarchies, like attempts to murder a successor of the throne.

And even a 'good' witch can also corrupt or become an extremist like the former Witch Queen. So why is their access to magic not questionable?

And why is an authoritarian regime ridiculing a world with mostly superior social systems? Besides, assume that the Witch World does serve as an example of a harmonious society, would you expect humans to learn from it without even knowing its existance? The less communication, the slower the development, and that works mutually note The witches are already enjoying the limitations of healing magic, as shown in the light novels.

One might wonder what valid aesop is there left on the subject of giving up magic.: Aiko and Momoko both had this flaw when they transferred. To a degree, also Onpu.: Leon, who is physically the strongest of the and was shown being able to single-handedly defeat an entire basketball team. This only applied before his.: Majo Toron,. This only applies to those inventions she had the girls test.: Practically all the fathers, to some degree. Special mention goes to Reika's father and Kenji (Aiko's dad).: At the end of the final series, the girls must choose between becoming full-fledged, long-lived Witches or remain as humans and stay in their own world.

Only Hana leaves for the Witch World while the rest of the girls decide that they will stay in the human world.: Dokkan contains numerous references to events and characters that haven't been mentioned since the first two seasons. Fami: 'The fact that I'm here is proof!' .: Seki-sensei is about thirty years old at the start of the series, and she had yet to get a stable boyfriend.: Majo Ruka's fairy Hehe is only seen in the original Ojamajo Doremi series and does not make an appearance in subsequent sequels, nor does Majo Ruka make a comment as to where she is. This is because Hehe's voice actress, decided to step away from voice acting in 2000.: Miho Maruyama gives off this vibe in Motto!

Episode 8.:. While the aesop about improving humanity (which is what some witches lose faith in, although curiously ) isn't necessarily bad, with some of the show's plot devices, it's either that the goal is too hard or even detrimental to reach, or that they can be more effectively solved with regulations, social structures, better understanding of a subject etc. For example, episode 42 of Sharp has Majo Heart making herbs for humans only to see humans waging wars for them.

Using simple economical knowledge, it's easy to figure out that this is a problem of availability, and would have largely been solved had the formula been universally available. Additionally, good nature doesn't exempt one from mishandling of new things, and sometimes it undermines the evolutionary spirit as well. In the light novels, in order to justify the ditching magic thing more, the aesop that magic is a cheap means of solving problems is more heavily emphasized. The points are that one who relies on magic too much will gradually lose her ability to solve problems with normal means; and the 'achieve everything with your own efforts' thing which implies that using magic undermines the achievements one can reach. Now replace magic with something like computers and the whole aesop gets really strange. It's basically the magic variation of the trope (what doesn't help is that since magic is real in-universe, in a sense it is science), and the sillier version too, considering that no one would say using computers undermines the achievements one can reach or makes life less meaningful. It's like saying a meaningful life equals ditching all means that liberate productive forces.: Seki-sensei has long hair.

Where she puts it all when she's riding her motorcycle and wearing her helmet is anyone's guess.:. Sharp Episode 46. Royal Patraine Ojamajos. If it hadn't been for Doremi, the girls would've completely lost. To wit: The FLAT4 were all of their attacks and Akatsuki had trapped the girls in giant bubbles that Hazuki was unable to break out of. Doremi managed to break free, but she was all alone, had limited magic, and against four powerful opponents. The Sharp finale had the girls facing.

None of them retained their powers after trying to get the, and she could easily have prevented them from getting it, but they (barely) succeeded either way. ANYONE vs. It was established that she had the most powerful magic of any Witch in the last 1000 years, and she can definitely prove it.

Royal Patraine Ojamajos vs. The girls win.: The girls primarily use their powers to help out and do other mundane things throughout the series. To list each of these would take too long. And when they actually come to fighting evil, they usually do so through unorthodox and impractical means and have to have their powers boosted in order to be successful. The latter case comes to a head in Sharp episode 46 when the prove too powerful AND skillful to take on in a fight, unlike.: Doremi and Aiko's hairstyles will mostly flip between shots.: Played with rather interestingly in the first season: the reason behind Reika Tamaki's behavior is that her dad spoils her rotten. And dad's reason to do it is that he feels guilty for letting Reika get seriously injured due to his carelessness.: 'Ojamajo de Happipi!'

Lots of dancing is seen during that ending as well. A magazine-only DVD even taught the dance using the cast of Ojamajo Kids.: Forbidden Magic.

All have repercussions when used:. transfers the wounds to the caster and has unpredictable effects when the caster uses it on herself.

Magic kills the caster upon success. Magic puts the caster in a coma; the length of which is proportional to how much is used.: Tooru, who was typically the more emotional of the FLAT4.

This only applies before his.:. The offers to fulfill Momoko's desire to see Majo Monroe again in exchange for using her to bring Hana to the and kill her there. Ultimately in that the.: Very much. Though magic can bring back the dead, doing so will result in the reviver dying instead upon success.: All the openings (and some of the endings) are sung by MAHO Dou, the collective name for the voice actresses of the main characters.: Akatsuki to Oyajide during Sharp.

Oyajide to Ojijide, though Oyajide was more along the lines of a.: All throughout Sharp. First, we have Ojijide tasking Oyajide with kidnapping Hana. The audience knows what's going on, but the Ojamajos don't and are legitimately shocked and horrified when Oyajide reveals his intentions and succeeds. Next, we have the introduction of Akatsuki and then his allegiance is revealed later. During episode 46, Doremi is by the.: The English dub stated that there were eight witch exams when there were actually nine total, and none of the episodes involving the exams were cut. So which one was technically not an exam?.

The English dub also changed some of the characters' backgrounds, most noticeably Masaru Yada/Justin Bailey. In the dub, he was a transfer student from a boarding school. Except that Doremi and Hazuki have known him since kindergarten and he even showed up in a flashback from when the girls were little. Good thing 4Kids never got past the first season, otherwise it would be strange trying to explain how Doremi had never heard of him even though they've literally been in the same class since kindergarten.: The Wizards during Sharp (only 30 remained by the time the series started!).

It's one of the reasons wanted to kidnap Hana and regain their lost land. During the later seasons when restores their remaining land to fertility and allowing the Wizards to repopulate.: Has shades of this, particularly Motto. Also, in a press release, 4Kids Entertainment pitched the show as such.: The Witch World and, by definition, The Wizard World are bizarre by human standards. The skies are strange and twisting, land itself seems to float in the air, and.: During Sharp, the girls had to raise and protect Hana-chan since she was a defenseless baby. The girls were serious enough about it, and they became even more serious after rolled by.: Fujio, who is shown to be the most intelligent of the FLAT4 and is the one taking notes of almost everything that's going on around him. This only applies before his.: Typically during the Level 1 exam.

The proctors say that one has to use magic to help someone in the human world and receive a 'thank you' in return all without getting caught. They never say how the thanks is received, or from whom you need to get the thanks from.

In Series 1, the girls helped a fox cub out and got a thank you from it in its own language. It was accepted. In Dokkan for both Pop's and Hana's exams, the former used magic to conjure a wind to protect a class project from the rain; the class thanked the wind, which was an indirect thanks to Pop, so she passed. On the other hand, Hana didn't use magic and got thanks.and Mota and Motamota said she failed as a result, but are taking it up with with the Senate.: Varied wildly from season to season and even had separate parts to them. Season 1: The first one had the fairies bouncing on the register until Dodo accidentally slammed Majo Rika followed by them producing cards of their respective owners. The second one showed the girls scanning various items with Pop scanning Majo Rika.

Sharp: The first one showed the Ojamajos using their calls for various activities only for Pop to steal one of them; she is then seen talking with her boyfriends while Doremi, the owner of the stolen call, looks for it. The second one showed Doremi allowing the fairies into her patraine call followed by the fairies going into their teenage forms within the Patraine laptop.: Oyajide in Sharp. Ojijide warns him that the Wizard World is dying and that they need Hana's magic to save it.

He then offers him a as a last resort, which overrides any morality he had and gets the turn under way.:. The Queen of the Witches kept her face hidden beneath a veil at all times until episode 50 of Dokkan.

The 's face was featureless aside from. Until the Motto finale.: The Maho Dou, who sing the opening theme songs. Later on, the main girls form an in-show band to record a song together.: On one episode the girls had a magic exam, during which they had to defeat other witches who obviously had many years of experience and vast numbers of spells in their arsenals. What did they do to impress them and win the competition? STAGE MAGIC TRICKS of course, and since the witches were so used to using real magic they didn't question if the magic was real. They assumed they were rare tricks even for them (like Hazuki rotating her head many times).: Don't cure others / resurrect the dead with magic. Because it damages you instead.

And would get you punished when caught (if you're still alive).:. During Pao's debut, a number of grey elephants wanted nothing to do with her since she was different. Some Witches have expressed some disdain for humans.:. Happens to Momoko regarding her tendencies during Dokkan. Happens to Doremi from time to time regarding to her tendencies in the 4Kids dub.: All Witches use these to help get around. Any Witch who was uses something else instead, like a dustpan or a bucket.: Never watch Motto!

On an empty stomach.: One of the Doremi-focused episodes in Motto! Had her being upset that everyone is acting distant towards her, only to realize it was to help set up her.: For the first two series:. The naive one: Doremi. The mannish one: Aiko.

The sexy one: Pop, who is eventually replaced by Onpu in Sharp. The wild card: Hazuki.: this for the most part by giving the cast an entirely new wardrobe in each season. Mazda 323f ba service manual. In Motto, their uniforms were even reversible! Sharp plays this straight with the.: Majo Toron, during her only appearance, is confirmed to have invented the girls' current porons and is later shown to have made a number of working gadgets.

It appears she zigzags between and.: Doremi, Momoko and 11-year-old Hana-chan.:. Doremi's mother has such a moment when Doremi blames herself for getting Hana sick. Everyone does this during the to help snap Doremi out of her by reminding her of how she helped them and made their lives better just from her boundless compassion alone.: Every time a witch is found out.: Plenty between Doremi and Pop. Pop generally finds Doremi immature and irresponsible, and Doremi can't stand her moments. However, Pop secretly admires Doremi and will watch out for her when things get tough.: Alexander T. Leon's occasion of habitually throwing English in his speech got by Aiko.

Aiko: 'Me, me, me, me!' Would you quit it with your half-hearted English?!.: All of the characters are portrayed in a realistic manner and the villains all have credible to be doing what they're doing. Two examples:. Doremi can be. On the other hand, she has shown a great many number of moments when she was compassionate and pure hearted and generally wanting to do the right thing no matter what. The.

Her goal is to prevent contact between the worlds by any means necessary and is even to ensure it. However, she wants to do this so as to prevent other witches from feeling the same unbearable pain she felt when she lost her husband to an accident and her son to old age and her grand children to their own paths.: The FLAT 4 use this to cast magic. It functions as most of time.: Or rather, she: at the end of Naisho episode 12.: Using magic to heal is a forbidden technique that comes at the cost of the magic user's own health. The one instance where the user wasn't subjected to the fatal state like she should have was because the spell's power was shared with a much more experienced witch.: Momoko, in addition to being.

Doremi as well in addition to her being and since she's the one who keeps the group together.: Pop. Do not try to wake her up.: Onpu, Oyajide; even Tamaki becomes a bit less of a.: A few throughout the series. Momoko suffers one when she was called out by the other Ojamajos for letting Hana get sick during Motto. Aiko becomes depressed when she feels she has failed to get her parents back together.

She nearly uses forbidden magic in the process. Doremi in the. She is so distraught over losing her closest friends to their chosen paths that she ignores everyone's pleas.

Even her, steak, did nothing.:. All the girls but Pop willingly risk being put into a millenia-long slumber to get the Love Supreme flower needed to save Hana's life in the finale of Sharp. Doremi barely succeeds, but Thankfully, Hana's first word ('MAMA!' ) was strong enough to wake them. Earlier, during the first season, uses to save everyone from; this caused her to fall into a coma due to her charm deteriorating and allowing to strike. The girls. Momoko nearly does this in her when she tries to bring back Majo Monroe.

Her crystal shattered from the strain of having to use such a powerful spell, causing her to fail and costing the poor girl her powers.: The Witch World (and by extension ) is concealed from the humans by means of being in a different dimension. Justified in this case since the Witches legitimately fear and have distrust of humans (the former being because of the 's and the latter being because some humans took advantage of Witches back when the curse wasn't around).

One episode had a straighter example in the form of El Dorado. This El Dorado was created when a group of Witches decided to live secluded on Earth and cast aside their magic. Subverted somewhat in that these Witches are welcoming to those who could actually find it ('somewhat' meaning that the only ones shown to have found it were either Witches or Witch Apprentices themselves; ).: The Queen of the Witch World.: The reason Kayoko hasn't been going to school. She gets over it in the after two separate episodes of progress in Motto!.: Doremi pulls this on Miyamoto in Na-i-sho episode 8 after he accidentally breaks Sachiko's recorder.: Naomi Okuyama is an eight-year-old version of this trope.: Some Witches have this view of humans.

It had a greater majority during flashbacks, where it was mentioned that some humans took advantage of Witches to get what they wanted and showed ungratefulness. This view was one reason the Witch World cut its ties to the Human World. It continues to this day, with some Witches still claiming that humans are greedy enough to take advantage of magic if ever given the chance.: Some Witches have this view of humans. For one reason or another, when a human makes something, there is something in it that magic can never reproduce, no matter how hard anyone tries. Finally, the made it to where if a human (and only a human) were to identify a Witch, the curse would be triggered.: Aiko discovers that her mom has made several attempts to contact her in the past after her parents' divorce, but never received any of the letters she sent.

Turns out that all of her letters were collected and hidden by her father, making Aiko very upset.: Too many to count.: Onpu.: This applies to the case of Hana, who hates vegetables, but must eat them to restore her magical energy.: Shiori Nakayama, Kayoko Nagato and Nozomi.:. Unfortunately,.: These were what the SOS Trio used as jokes, to everyone's dismay. Oddly, only Hazuki found them funny.: One episode of Motto involved Doremi turning into a in one of Nobuko's and Miho's mangas.: 'Ojamajo' was originally used by Majo Rika to refer to the girls clumsiness and incompetence.

By season 2, the girls took it as meaning 'apprentices' instead.: Doremi's reaction when Majo Rika and Lala tell her she must become a witch is. Doremi: To tell you the truth, I've always wanted to become a witch. 'Please make me a witch?

Please, please, pleaaaaase?!' .: Aiko, born and raised in Osaka.: Female example for the Queen of the Witches in that she had been watching over the girls the entire time as Yuki-sensei.: Aiko was this in the first series before Onpu performed her. By the beginning of Sharp, Onpu was all but from then on, though Aiko occasionally lapses back into the role.: Hana becoming a witch apprentice is technically a surprise spoiler to newcomers who haven't seen the show, yet Dokkan! Makes this unavoidable due to its. Toei doesn't help this either in since they throw her image around Dokkan!

Promotions and merchandise like free candy.: Hazuki always laughs uncontrollably whenever the SOS Trio make a joke. Momoko gets this way about Toyoken too.: Ojamajo Doremi 16 and Ojamajo Doremi 17.: Sweet Song ABC (in, even!) and Oh! Yasai Samba.: Used by Oyajide during episode 22 of Sharp. Onpu lampshades it.: Nozomi aka Non-chan. And uncommonly for the trope, she actually does die.:.: Hazuki, Tamaki to some degree.: The witches are capable of dying even though their lifespans are longer than humans, notable examples being Majo Monroe and Majo Clara.: In the light novels, when the girls become witch apprentices once again, they ask the Witch Queen to set an artificial restriction on them, so that when one uses magic for her own purposes, they will lose their powers.

Not long later, the girls start to abuse the rule they set up themselves — Oh god, I'm in trouble yet I can't use magic for my own purpose! But no worries, I'll just ask my friends to use magic to solve this problem for me.: Doremi wants to give one to Igarashi-sempai, but at the end of the series someone confesses to her! Kotake: Well, yeah it's true you're a total klutz, but I.I.well to say it, everyone here loves you!. Kimitaka also confesses to Pop before he moves away.: In one episode, Reika wants to be slapped because it's a proof of love, and doesn't stop escalating her misbehaving until she gets her wish.: Somehow happened with both Doremi and Hazuki. In the latter case, it's clearly one-sided from Fujio to Hazuki but played with in the former as both Kotake and Akatsuki's focus episode(s) with Doremi are in different seasons.

In the end Doremi chooses Kotake.: Faami, from the final episode of Naisho, is Doremi's granddaughter.: Magic can do almost anything without consequence as long as you're powerful enough, except for a small number of forbidden acts which are defined very early on:, and.: Each girl has their own specific magic spell for common magic as well as a variant for casting. The 4Kids dub ended up creating unnecessary work for themselves by ditching the standard 'Incantation+What I Want+Appear' formula by having the girls create rhymes on the spot.:. An odd variant: all the Porons used in the series are actually musical instruments from the Witch World, but not used via. Some Witches use the more generic variety.: All the girls in Sharp, especially Doremi in the last few episodes.:. Are little girls really ready to take care of a newborn?. In Motto!

Ojamajo Doremi episode 32, Momoko works her hardest to become a 'Mama' for Hana-chan (she wanted Hana to treat her the same as she did the more experienced Ojamajos), but not only does she repeatedly have trouble, she accidentally puts Hana's life in danger by letting her eat too much pudding and giving her a stomachache. Aiko, on behalf of all the Ojamajos, threatens to never let Momoko near Hana again, sending Momoko into a. It took a pep talk from Onpu to get Momoko's motivation back.: Aiko was under the impression that her mother had remarried after seeing her with a baby. This gives her the push to convince her father to do the same when he gets set up on a date with his boss' daughter. Later, when Aiko spies on her mother again, she sees a neighbor of her mother visiting her to borrow MSG (sugar in the dub version) and finds out that the baby was actually the neighbor's.: Hana in Japanese means flower ( because it was Doremi who named her), and Tourbillon in French means spiral.: A lot of the items seen in the show have popped up as toys in the real world.: Twice. The first time was during the first season with an upgrade to their porons.

Xbox arcade games jtag. The second, which occurred during Sharp, gave the Royal Patraine, which was only used when Oyajide kidnapped Hana-chan and when Majo Tourbillon threatened Hana-chan's life at the end of Sharp.: Onpu has a episode in Na-i-sho when she recounts what it really means to be herself in spite of her career, where she has to take on roles and display a public image that is not exactly who she really is.: The Wizard World is a bleak, dark, and, as described by Ojijide, an infertile wasteland. It is so inhospitable that the Wizards themselves have become a (only 30 of the remain!) and hatch a plot to. It wasn't always like that; it only turned into this barren wasteland after the previous King of the Wizard World lost a good deal of land to a previous Queen of the Witch World in a game of cards. The Wizard World is restored to its former glory by the current Witch Queen after the current Wizard King expresses remorse for his and his people's actions.

Today, it is very much an aversion of this trope.: Some of the cursed brambles worked this way: The curses they cast to make their victims cross the invoked things that were genuine issues or insecurities for said victims (Majo Ume and Majo Rika feeling depressed regarding being Witch Frogs and the possibility of never returning to normal and Tamaki via her insecurity about being a normal school girl upon graduating elementary).: Usually played straight, but there are a few exceptions. In the episode where Momoko receives a video letter from her Beth in New York, Beth's new friend Sachiko is drawn with narrower eyes to highlight the racial differences between the two girls.:.

Per the norm with animes, the girls use their magic to secretly help people with their problems. In Motto!, the girls use their awesome magical powers to. Bake. The girls subvert this in Sharp when they decide to take care of Hana without magic.: George, Majo Tourbillon's husband, made a cake named after her called 'Tourbillon My Love'.:.: Played with. Usually gives the girls new powers in order to help them with the current task at hand, such as aiding them in using Royal Patraine when they're not together, extracting Bad Cards, etc.: Aiko, Onpu, and Momoko all came from separate schools before they arrived.

Hana-chan technically counts since she's from the Witch World Kindergarten.: Doremi especially, but the main things that come to mind are the first two season finales when they have to save Onpu and then save Hana, respectively.: Reika Tamaki gives the infamous 'Oh ho ho ho ho!' Laugh a lot,. Erika uses it, too.: Completely averted in the Sharp movie (which takes place right before episode 40), but the Motto movie is very vague (though it ties in with the series during Dokkan).: Doremi, and HUGE ones at rate.:.

Ojamajo Doremi suffers notoriously from this, especially during Motto! If the episode doesn't consist of a magical power-up, or isn't extremely emotional, you can count on some very awful animation. It is sometimes used deliberately for comedy. Hazuki gets this pretty bad, as she is gradually. Even in the first season, however, there are two notable instances.

One where she walks into a room and has no legs, and another where her and a side character switch eye colors. Hands get increasingly more frequently drawn as just stumps or balls, especially later in the series. One could argue that this is just stylization, the fact that gets more common, along with increasing off-model-ness, shows otherwise. Again, Hazuki gets the worst of it (along with her glasses almost permanentally falling into territory), especially since she is usually the farthest in the background. Played completely straight in the Motto season finale, where at one point Doremi is shown without her odango.: Sometime after Ojamajo Doremi Dokkan!, Hazuki and Yada get together, as they're mentioned to have been dating for quite a while in the.

Also, Doremi and Kotake get together after having a significant amount of between them.: Reika, Hazuki to some degree.: Ojamajo Doremi has a different one for each season:. Season 1: 'Happiness and luckiness, reach everyone!' . Season 2 ( Sharp): 'Thump, thump, tremble, tremble, spin, spin, revolve!' (Or if you're watching the, 'Happiness and excitement for everyone!'

). Season 3 ( Motto!): 'Cheerfulness to cookies! We'll teach you the recipe of magic!' . Season 4 ( Dokkan!): 'Pure, pure dream become big!'

. ( Na-i-sho): 'You may take notes, but pass them around secretly!' .: Hazuki, when she gets scared.: In the first series, Doremi gets one of these at her first apprentice witch exam, which is to conjure up whatever is requested by the examiners. She doesn't pass.:. Majo Rika does little to disguise the fact that she's a Witch and outright dresses accordingly.

This gets her caught and cursed when Doremi uncovers her. Oyajide uses magic once to disguise himself as a woman, and his masculine mannerisms continue to show through along with his mustache after Hana's magic undoes part of it.: Hazuki (parents are caring but always busy), Reika (likewise, but combined with factor), Shiori (mom is dead, is a bit distanced from her ), etc.: Hana during Motto!

Though later in the season, Hana isn't as responsible for this as she is earlier in the season: the former Witch Queen's predecessor casts a curse on Hana that makes her hate vegetables, resetting a problem that the Ojamajos had previously solved using carrot cake.: Reika is a selfish and shrill, but an episode in the first season showed her feeling genuinely insecure about her dad's love and taking the local Shiori under her wing.: This happens to Doremi a lot in the first season. People usually can't tell what her crafts are supposed to resemble because she's such a.

In episode 17, Majo Rika and Lala both guessed wrong as to what Doremi's charm resembled, while in episode 12, Misaki kept insisting Doremi's 'panda' charm was a 'soccer ball' charm.: All of the fairies who accompany the main characters (Dodo, Rere, Mimi, Roro, Nini, Toto, and Fafa) say nothing but their own names for most of the series. It doesn't inconvenience them in the slightest.: Used to fuel the girls' magic in the first season.: Used to be this with Doremi, Hazuki, and Aiko in the first season, with Pop as the (even though she still kind of is.) and when Onpu was not officially part of the group. By Onpu occasionally in talk segments of CDs and in Ojamajo Doremi #, where she feels left out because they have been friends longer with each other than with her.: Pop makes it quite clear she has to go after eating ice cream.: In episode 7, Pop has to wizz really bad due to eating some ice cream.: Pop ends up wetting herself right before she could make it to a stall.: In the second episode, Doremi uses magic to with Hazuki.: The Flat 4 in Sharp: four apprentice wizards that oppose the girls.: Episode 6 of Na-i-sho uses Tchaikovsky's. Hazuki and/or Momoko: 'Majo Rika!.: Pop Harukaze. So much so that most students in her class look up to her as a leader.: The Witches born from roses count as one, though Witches who start off as normal humans are still Witches regardless. Their would be the Wizards, who are born from penpen grass.: The girls have to learn how to use magic and pass a series of tests to be granted additional powers.: The previous Witch Queen, who is villain for the second half of the series, is a tamer version of this trope (as she only tries to prevent interaction between humans and witches).: Used right before the to help snap Doremi out of her.: Despite the realism this series has, the Ojamajos, along with several other characters, have hair colors that are definitively outrageous. The Witches and Wizards have this too, but it's given their magical nature.: The witch uniforms in Ojamajo Doremi 16.

One day Pop was out scavenging with Hana, and found a beautiful rose inside the Queen's garden. Curious, she picked the rose and brought it home. Unwittingly, that rose can cause all wishes to become true, whether good or bad. Good wishes will turn the rose white and bloom, while bad wishes will turn the rose black and wither. After a heated argument with her sister Doremi, Pop wishes that Doremi loses all her magic and be turned into a mouse.

Hilarity ensues, as Doremi and the others try to put everything back to normal.

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