A song themed around the Japanese vowels (a, i, u, e, o)
A collection of Japanese songs themed around the gojūon (the Japanese syllabary).
It features selections from a variety of genres, from playful, nursery rhyme–like songs perfect for children learning Japanese, to tracks by top J-pop artists and hip-hop.
- Japanese counting songs: nostalgic temari (handball) songs and children’s folk songs
- Popular Songs Ranking for Toddlers
- Get pumped with popular songs from “Okaasan to Issho”! A collection of timeless tunes everyone will want to sing together
- [Children's Songs] Cute songs recommended for childcare. List of popular nursery rhymes.
- A roundup of songs that start with “U.” Perfect for shiritori or picking tracks at karaoke!
- [GReeeeN’s Masterpieces] Numerous Tie-ins! Collection of Big Hits & Popular Songs
- GReeeeN Graduation Songs, Entrance Ceremony Songs, and Popular Songs Ranking [2026]
- [Karaoke] A roundup of GReeeeN’s easy-to-sing songs
- A compilation of Vocaloid songs with titles starting with 'A'
- Funny songs recommended for kids: Japanese music that will make you laugh without even trying when you listen.
- GReeeeN Youth Songs: Popular Song Rankings [2026]
- GReeeeN Friendship Songs: Popular Song Ranking [2026]
- [J-Pop] A collection of popular songs with “love” in the title
A song themed around the Japanese syllables a-i-u-e-o (21–30)
Oh! Vegetable SambaMAHO dō

An insert song from “Mo~tto! Ojamajo Doremi.” The lyrics are fun, featuring vegetable names woven in alphabetical order (a-i-u-e-o order).
It’s sung by five performers: Doremi Harukaze (CV: Chiemi Chiba), Hazuki Fujiwara (CV: Tomoko Akiya), Aiko Senoo (CV: Yuki Matsuoka), Onpu Segawa (CV: Rumi Shishido), and Momoko Asuka (CV: Nagomi Miyahara).
B GardenTeam B(AKB48)

It’s included as the third track on Type B of the 2014 single “Labrador Retriever.” The lyrics are styled like an acrostic using the Japanese syllabary and include every member’s name along with brief self-introductions, making it a song that really gets the crowd going with calls at concerts.
The lyrics were, of course, written by the producer, Yasushi Akimoto.


