Chichi is from the iconic foundational Japanese manga — a modern formation possibly from the iconic foundational Japanese term for child. A modern American baby name in the broader Japanese anime heritage aesthetic. Chi-Chi — *iconic foundational female character in the foundational Japanese manga/anime franchise Dragon Ball (1984-1995) + Dragon Ball Z (1988-1995) + Dragon Ball Super (2015-present); created by the iconic foundational Akira Toriyama (1955-2024) — widely considered one of the foundational greatest manga artists in history; widely considered one of the foundational shonen anime franchises of all time; the iconic foundational Dragon Ball manga has sold over 350 million copies worldwide; the iconic Chi-Chi is the foundational Princess of Fire Mountain + Ox-King's daughter + wife of iconic foundational protagonist Son Goku + mother of iconic foundational Gohan + Goten; widely considered one of the foundational mother characters in modern shonen anime; her foundational character represents the foundational warrior-turned-housewife archetype — having been a foundational martial artist + tomboy in the original Dragon Ball before transitioning into the iconic foundational disciplined mother of Gohan in Dragon Ball Z; her foundational obsession with Gohan's education + her foundational protective mothering style became one of the foundational tropes in modern shonen anime; her foundational iconic Fire-Mountain helmet (worn in the original Dragon Ball) + foundational Chinese-style dresses in DBZ* + her foundational hair bun aesthetic became one of the foundational anime fashion symbols of the 1980s + 1990s; her foundational role as the foundational matriarch of the iconic foundational Son family is widely studied. Princess Chichi — modern Japanese-anime heritage naming.
Featured throughout Japanese anime.
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Chichi reduces to eight.