Asuka Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Asuka. Here they are! All 9 of them:

Asuka...you're really cute. When I look at you...I start wanting to protect you.
Aya Kanno
Everyone makes mistakes, Ronnie. Some of us just realize it sooner than others. The important thing is that when we do, we try to make amends for the hurt we've caused. That's all any human being can really ask of another. Asuka.
C.M. Stunich (Tough Luck (Hard Rock Roots, #3))
These foreign cultures then blended with the Japanese traditional cultures, resulting in the Asuka culture.
Enthralling History (Ancient Japan: An Enthralling Overview of Ancient Japanese History, Starting from the Jomon Period to the Heian Period (Asia))
Asuka Japan The Kofun period was followed by the Asuka period,
Captivating History (History of Japan: A Captivating Guide to Japanese History.)
there was one place they could generate a field without fail—the ground beneath their feet. Otherwise, the hundred-meter-tall giants wouldn’t have been able to walk across any stretch of ground—no matter how well engineered or fortified—without sinking. That might sound too convenient to be plausible, but former Nerv executives had taken the phenomenon very seriously, and they’d left their records behind for the current staff. The limits of the human form— Humans cannot escape the ground. We are destined to crawl around in the dirt forever—to smear ourselves with it. According to them, this quirk of the A.T. Fields was proof of our fate. At the time, Asuka had said, “Duh, isn’t that obvious?
Ikuto Yamashita (Neon Genesis Evangelion: Anima, Vol. 1)
Asuka carried the box of defective bots to the Bot Shop, metallic limbs and stubby, cylindrical bodies rattling like anxiety trapped in an old mason jar under the bed.
Yume Kitasei (The Deep Sky)
There was Asuka, birthplace of Yamato Japan, with its long-vacant burial mounds, surfaces carved with supernatural images of beasts and semi-humans, their makers and their meaning lost in the timeless swaying of the rice paddies around them; Koya-san, the holy mountain, reputedly the resting place of Kobo Daishi, Japan’s great saint, who is said to linger near the mountain’s vast necropolis not dead but meditating, his vigil marked by the mantras of monks that drone among the nearby markers of the dead as ancient and eternal as summer insects in primordial groves;
Barry Eisler (A Lonely Resurrection (John Rain, #2))
The Asuka period only lasted nearly two centuries (538–710 CE),
Enthralling History (Ancient Japan: An Enthralling Overview of Ancient Japanese History, Starting from the Jomon Period to the Heian Period (Asia))
They are still looking for me. They rage for me. They mourn for me. They call for me. They are my remnants.
Asuka Katsura (Le Portrait de Petite Cossette 2 (Le Portrait de Petite Cossette, #2))