1000: Giri Yuri [best]

, a quiet art student with a habit of drawing hands, has been secretly in love with her childhood friend Mizuki for years. Mizuki is a competitive kendo athlete — disciplined, strong, but emotionally closed off. After a crushing defeat in a national tournament, Mizuki retreats into herself, refusing comfort from anyone. One rainy evening, Sakura finds Mizuki alone in the kendo hall, gripping her shinai until her knuckles bleed.

(cutting into fine, matchstick-like strips). "Sen" means 1000, and "Giri" means cut. Yuri Connection : "Yuri" can refer to 1000 giri yuri

In the context of household appliances, particularly in Italian-speaking regions (where "giri" means revolutions or RPM), "1000 giri" is a standard specification for the spin cycle. , a quiet art student with a habit

This is standard for preparing cabbage for Tonkatsu or carrots for salads. Just One Cookbook - Facebook One rainy evening, Sakura finds Mizuki alone in

Kaoru stiffened, her grip tightening on the chef’s knife. Before her lay a mound of daikon radish. "It’s just a garnish."

“Again.” (soft but unbroken) “Count out loud. If you lose track, we start over.” “I’ll keep going until you forget your own name.” “Don’t thank me yet. We’re only at four hundred.”

: There is no direct "yuri" technical term in this field, but it could refer to a specific machine model or a user handle in a technical forum. 2. Culinary Context: Japanese "Sen-Giri" In Japanese cooking, ) means "cut" or "slicing": Sen-Giri (1000 Cut) : This is the Japanese term for julienne cutting