enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Japanese honorifics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_honorifics

    Words for family members have two different forms in Japanese. When referring to one's own family members while speaking to a non-family-member, neutral, descriptive nouns are used, such as haha ( 母 ) for "mother" and ani ( 兄 ) for "older brother".

  3. Honorific speech in Japanese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honorific_speech_in_Japanese

    Japanese uses honorific constructions to show or emphasize social rank, social intimacy or similarity in rank. The choice of pronoun used, for example, will express the social relationship between the person speaking and the person being referred to, and Japanese often avoids pronouns entirely in favor of more explicit titles or kinship terms.

  4. List of gairaigo and wasei-eigo terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_gairaigo_and_wasei...

    Gairaigo are Japanese words originating from, or based on, foreign-language, generally Western, terms.These include wasei-eigo (Japanese pseudo-anglicisms).Many of these loanwords derive from Portuguese, due to Portugal's early role in Japanese-Western interaction; Dutch, due to the Netherlands' relationship with Japan amidst the isolationist policy of sakoku during the Edo period; and from ...

  5. 111 grandpa nicknames to consider for the grandfather in your ...

    www.aol.com/news/70-grandpa-names-grandfather...

    Check out the list below for options that include traditional options, fun names and words for grandfather in other languages. 111 grandpa nicknames to consider.

  6. Baba (name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baba_(name)

    Eiichi Baba (馬場 鍈一, 1879–1937), Japanese bureaucrat and cabinet minister in early Shōwa period Frank Shozo Baba (1915–2008), Japanese American who worked for Voice of America and Japan Fumika Baba (馬場 ふみか, born 1995), Japanese actress and model

  7. Mama and papa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mama_and_papa

    Mama and papa use speech sounds that are among the easiest to produce: bilabial consonants like /m/, /p/, and /b/, and the open vowel /a/.They are, therefore, often among the first word-like sounds made by babbling babies (babble words), and parents tend to associate the first sound babies make with themselves and to employ them subsequently as part of their baby-talk lexicon.

  8. Issei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issei

    These are formed by combining one of the Japanese numbers corresponding to the generation with the Japanese word for generation (世, sei). The Japanese-American and Japanese-Canadian communities have themselves distinguished their members with terms like issei, nisei, and sansei, which describe the first, second and third generation of ...

  9. Obasan (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obasan_(disambiguation)

    Obasan and obāsan are Japanese words meaning 'older woman' and 'grandmother' respectively, sometimes found in English in anime and manga.They may also mean: Obasan, a novel by Joy Kogawa, published in 1981