Trained on 100 images.
She's an Artificial Intelligence named after an ad for Candy.AI which had a girl with short blue hair and a pink bodysuit.
So, In Japanese, "ame" is a famous homophone that means both "rain" and "candy". While they share the same phonetic spelling (あめ in hiragana), they have distinct kanji characters, entirely different origins, and are differentiated in spoken Japanese by pitch accent.
- Rain (雨) Kanji: 雨 Pitch Accent: High-to-low ((\overline{a}me))
Etymology: Derived from ama (heaven/sky) or amamizu (heaven's water).
Usage: Used for the weather (e.g., ame ga furu / it's raining).
- Candy (飴) Kanji: 飴 Pitch Accent: Low-to-high ((a\acute{m}e))
Etymology: Derived from amai, the Japanese word for "sweet".
Usage: Used for hard candies or sweets. In the Kansai/Osaka region, it is often affectionately called ame-chan.