Hino (surname)

Hino (written: 日野 or 火野) is a Japanese surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Akihiro Hino (日野 晃博, born 1968), Japanese video game designer and businessman
  • Ashihei Hino (火野 葦平, 1907 – 1960), Japanese soldier
  • Hideshi Hino (日野 日出志, born 1946), Japanese manga artist
  • Keizo Hino (日野 啓三, 1929 – 2002), Japanese author
  • Kumazō Hino (日野 熊蔵, 1878 – 1946), Japanese inventor and aviation pioneer
  • Hino Tomiko (日野 富子, 1440–1496), official wife of Ashikaga Yoshimasa
  • Manami Hino (桧野 真奈美, born 1980), Japanese bobsledder
  • Matsuri Hino (樋野 まつり), Japanese manga artist
  • Ryuju Hino (日野 龍樹, born 1995), Japanese figure skater
  • Satoshi Hino (日野 聡, born 1978), Japanese voice actor
  • Shigefumi Hino (日野 重文, born 1963), Japanese graphics designer, game director and planner from Nintendo
  • Shōhei Hino (火野 正平, born 1949), Japanese actor and singer
  • Suguru Hino (日野 優, born 1982), Japanese football player
  • Takeshi Hino (日野 剛志, born 1990), Japanese international rugby union player
  • Terumasa Hino (日野 皓正, born 1942), Japanese jazz trumpet, cornet and flügelhorn player
  • Yuji Hino (火野 裕士, born 1985), Japanese professional wrestler

Fictional characters

  • Eiji Hino (火野 映司), the title character in Kamen Rider OOO
  • Emu Hino (日野 絵霧), a character from Crying Freeman
  • Kahoko Hino (日野 香穂子), a character from La Corda d'Oro
  • Kenichi Hino (火野 ケンイチ), the title character in MegaMan NT Warrior
  • Rei Hino (火野 レイ) or Sailor Mars, a character in Sailor Moon
  • Shunsuke Hino (日野 俊介), the Yellow Ranger from the 1989 Super Sentai Series Turboranger
  • Shōzō Hino & Tomoe Hino (日野 昇造 & 日野巴), characters from Amai Seikatsu
gollark: Maybe you would be better off using quantum field theory. Except that doesn't have gravity/general relativity, only special relativity, so you should work out how to unify those?
gollark: We can just say in the technical and artistic merit video that "the robot's projectile trajectory handling maths has relativistic corrections in it and would thus be equipped to fire projectiles near the speed of light, if we actually needed that, had a way to accelerate things that fast, could do so without destroying everything, did not have interactions with the air to worry about, and could safely ignore quantum effects".
gollark: If you really want to you can apply special relativity, sure.
gollark: I don't *think* we need to consider air resistance significantly.
gollark: This is fine*.
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