雅虎香港 搜尋

搜尋結果

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hikaru_UtadaHikaru Utada - Wikipedia

    Ultra Blue was Utada's fifth consecutive chart-topping Japanese album (excluding the English-language Exodus) to sell in excess of 500,000 copies in the first week. On July 13, Toshiba EMI published a report stating that Ultra Blue had sold over one million copies worldwide and four million digital ringtones already making it one of ...

  2. In 2006, Utada released her fifth studio album, Ultra Blue, led by the digital single "This Is Love". In February 2007, Utada released " Flavor of Life ", the theme song for the drama Hana Yori Dango Returns , which became one of her most commercially successful singles, selling over eight million downloads and becoming the second ...

    • J-Pop Synthpop Trance
  3. Science Fiction is the first greatest hits album and fourth overall compilation album by Japanese-American singer-songwriter Hikaru Utada, released on April 10, 2024, through Epic Records Japan and USM Japan.

  4. " Ulterior Motives " is a pop song recorded by the British-Canadian filmmakers Christopher Saint Booth and Philip Adrian Booth in the mid-1980s, first released in 1986 in the pornographic film Angels of Passion. [7] . It gained popularity online after a seventeen-second snippet of the song, at the time unidentified, was posted online in 2021.

  5. The Hubble Ultra-Deep Field (HUDF) is a deep-field image of a small region of space in the constellation Fornax, containing an estimated 10,000 galaxies. The original data for the image was collected by the Hubble Space Telescope from September 2003 to January 2004 and the first version of the image was released on March 9, 2004. [1]

  6. Dark electric blue is a dark cyan color that is the color called electric blue, formalized as a color in the ISCC–NBS system in 1955. [7] The normalized color coordinates for dark electric blue are identical to Payne's grey, which was first recorded as a color name in English in 1835. [8]

  7. Pneumono ultra micro scopic silico volcano coniosis is the longest word in the English language. The word can be analysed as follows: Pneumono: from ancient Greek (πνεύμων, pneúmōn) which means lungs ultra: from Latin, meaning beyond micro and scopic