It means the Ootori, the Asian phoenix, a mystical bird of legend.
It means "to fly".To give you an example, take the 鳳 (Hou) in Houshou's and my name.Well... not that I mind though.I can't believe it!
Oh mijn gooood!
While the
凰 (Ou) is female.
The hou'ou/hoh-oh (AKA fenghuang) were originally depicted as a pair, with the feng/hou depicted as male while the huang/ou is depicted as female, but the distinction has blurred over time with both often being conflated together as a single nebulous entity.About kanji characters, you see... every individual kanji carries its own meaning.
By the way, the 鳳 (Hou) is male,
Are they talking about the planes... must be a metaphor for a carrier, hmm.
Ohhhh. Miiiiijn. Goddd!
What about "Shou" then?
OMG!♪
Ootori...?
Oo... tori...?
A big bird in flight?
Additional split-up line with ruby text added to help convey Atlanta's line of thought.The Akatsuki and Nightmare gang will be bugging me if I don't remember.