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・ Ojo de Agua Dam
・ Ojo de Agua de Morán, Jalisco
・ Ojo de Agua Department
・ Ojo de Agua Raid
・ Ojo de Agua, State of Mexico
・ Ojo de Liebre
・ Ojo de Liebre Lagoon
・ Ojo de Vaca Station
・ Ojo del Sol
・ Ojo Feliz, New Mexico
・ Ojo in Oz
・ Ojo Maduekwe
・ Ojo por ojo
・ Ojo Sarco, New Mexico
・ Ojo Taylor
Ojo the Lucky
・ Ojo, Lagos State
・ Ojocaliente, Zacatecas
・ Ojoceratops
・ Ojojona
・ Ojok-tong
・ Ojokojo Torunarigha
・ Ojomo Oluda
・ Ojoraptorsaurus
・ Ojos Así
・ Ojos Azules
・ Ojos azules (song)
・ Ojos de Agua
・ Ojos de Agua, Comayagua
・ Ojos de Brujo


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Ojo the Lucky : ウィキペディア英語版
Ojo the Lucky

Ojo is a character from the fictional Oz book series by L. Frank Baum.〔Jack Snow, ''Who's Who in Oz'', Chicago, Reilly & Lee, 1954; New York, Peter Bedrick Books, 1988; p. 148.〕
He first appeared in ''The Patchwork Girl of Oz''. Ojo is a Munchkin who lived with his uncle, Unc Nunkie in the Blue Forest, a remote location in the north of the Munchkin Country. During a trip with his uncle to visit his uncle's friend Dr. Pipt, Ojo learns from Pipt's wife, Dame Margolotte, that he is known to others as "Ojo the Unlucky." Ojo discovers rationalizations for this, including the fact that he was born on Friday the 13th, is left-handed, and has a wart under his arm, and he begins to believe that bad luck follows him wherever he goes. However, the Tin Woodman officially deems him Ojo the Lucky after hearing these reasons because he believes Ojo's bad luck is due to a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Ojo later starred in his own book, ''Ojo in Oz'' by Ruth Plumly Thompson. In this book, Thompson picked up a dropped thread of Baum's about Ojo being possibly related to royalty and made him the Prince of Seebania, whose family was enchanted by an evil sorcerer named Mooj, causing his father, King Ree Alla Bad, to run around Oz as a bandit called Realbad.
Although Ojo is a Munchkin, he seems to be taller than the Munchkins Dorothy met during her first trip to Oz, though this is never stated. It is usually surmised from a passage in which Dr. Pipt refers to Ojo getting "taller," though only the comparative form of the word is used. Neither Ojo nor Unc Nunkie are described as "tall".
In John R. Neill's books, Ojo is attendant to Kabumpo. This is never explained, but nothing precludes it from being a task a young prince's parents might force him to endure.
==References==




抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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