Monkey D. Luffy and the One Piece [One Piece/Harry Potter]

Dec 12, 2006 22:16

Fandom: One Piece + Harry Potter crossover
Pairing(s): None
Rating: PG
Word Count: 3687
Disclaimer: I do not own One Piece or any of its characters. One Piece belongs to Oda Eiichiro-sensei. This is a non-profit fanfiction written by a fan, for the enjoyment of other fans
Warning: Spoilers up to pre-Water 7 arc
Summary: One Piece characters ( ( Read more... )

pairing: one piece gen, fandom: one piece, genre: x-over, character: one piece - straw hat pirates, fandom: harry potter

Leave a comment

Comments 3

pikabot January 29 2007, 18:41:49 UTC
Ok. I don't usually read Harry Potter fanfiction in general(I like the books, but the fandom is full of horrors). And I typically loathe crossovers.

That said.

This fic was hilarious. I think I lost it at "...That doesn't make me happy, you prats!".

My only complaint...what's this 'ou'? Is that supposed to be 'oi'? I mean, it's possible that that's a superior romanization or something, but to my canadian french-speaking brain it sounds like Luffy is constantly asking 'Where?'.

Reply

cosmiko_ling February 6 2007, 16:30:48 UTC
Thanks~

I'm certainly glad to hear you enjoyed even if you don't read HP fanfiction or crossovers.

"Ou" is... something I picked up from the anime and playing one of the games too much. >__<;; (Luffy is always going "ou, " when he meets people in the game, and it kinda got stuck on me. ^^;; ) It's like an exclamation made in acknowledgement, I think? Like when greeting people, or responding to something someone said.

(I wouldn't claim to be any kind of expert though. I was merely using it as I've seen it being used. >__<; Sorry about it, usually, I don't support the excessive use of "fan-Japanese" either and try to keep the Japanese in my fics to a minimum and only have certain sounds that affect the tone of speaker.)

Reply

pikabot February 6 2007, 18:27:43 UTC
I think know the sound you're talking about, but it's always sounded more like 'Oi' to me, which IS actually part of the english language in that context, and doesn't sound wierd to people who speak french.

I dunno, food for thought, I guess.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up