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Tamaki mentions the strongest kendoist she's ever seen, and her teammates assume she's talking about her father, but she actually means her mother.
#LITTLE INFERNO TV TROPES SERIES#
Initially averted with Kurenai in the first series as she is known as the Jounin teacher of Hinata, Kiba, and Shino without any mentions of her being this status because of the influence of a male.This can be best shown in her Infinite Tsukuyomi dream where Dan becomes Hokage instead while Tsunade became his loyal secretary with Jiraiya and Orochimaru as her companions. However, she becomes a Hokage because she wants to inherit both her brother, her lover, and Naruto's legacy. Tsunade is the student of the Third Hokage as well as being descended from the Senju clan which the First and Second Hokages (her grandfather and granduncle respectively) hail from.note Compare this with Sasuke who trains in order to kill Itachi while Naruto trains not only to bring Sasuke back but also fight against the mysterious Akatsuki forces. She broke off her friendship with Ino to compete for Sasuke's affections, she makes her hair long in hopes to impress Sasuke, and finally she wants to train with Tsunade because she wants to be equal with them.
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Everything that Sakura Haruno does always has something to do with Sasuke and Naruto.A woman receiving help from another woman in working towards her goals, a man receiving help from another man, or a man receiving help from another woman are seen in a far less negative light than a woman receiving help from a man, even though none are any different from the other in practice. However, there may be a certain element of Double Standards present in this aspect of the trope namely, the notion that a strong woman's achievements — no matter how genuine her efforts were in gaining them — aren't worthy of recognition if a man was involved in making her the person she is now in the past — even if he only gave her training, support, and advice to aid her rather than grant her any advantages that undermine her efforts — or simply if she has any ties to men at all. Under this trope, a female character's membership in a field — usually male-dominated — is implied to be mostly due to motivation and training by her male relatives or acquaintances who are active in the same field, rather than her own independent ambitions.