最愛is a Japanese word that means the best love, beloved, or most sincere love of your life. This could be a romantic love such as your love for your spouse or a boyfriend/girlfriend. It can also apply to the extreme love you have for your children or a parent and maybe a really ...
Adverbs describe time, degree, manner, quantity, conjecture, and more. The separate category of Japanese onomatopoeia are also included in adverbs. The placement of Japanese adverbs in a sentence is relatively free in simple sentences. Try Japanese today ...
The current study has a different perspective in that it focuses on the sociocultural standpoint. In this study, therefore, we investigated the process of objectification and subjectification through the lens of children’s gestures and their learning by considering gestures as a means of ...
Shortname: Japanese dolls Apple Name: Japanese dolls Known as: Hinamatsuri | Imperial Dolls | Girl's Day Codepoint: U+1F38E Copy Shortcode: :dolls: Copy Decimal: ALT+127886 Unicode Version: 6.0 (2010-10-11) Emoji Version: 1.0 (2015-06-09) Categories: ⚽ Activities Sub Categories:...
Aoki has a crush on Hashimoto, the girl in the seat next to him in class. But he despairs when he borrows her eraser and sees she's written the name of another boy—Ida—on it. To make matters more confusing, Ida sees Aoki holding that very eraser and thinks Aoki has a crush on...
“Boys’ love” also emerged in this period, and manyshōjomanga titles at the time feature male rather than female main characters. Even stories that do not thematize the interrogation of gender tend to avoid idealizedshōjo. Instead, girl characters are ordinary—clumsy, tomboyish, imperfect (...
女子 (joshi) means “girl” or “younger woman.” 高生 (kōsei) is a shortened form of 高校生 (kōkōsei) that refers to a high school student. It’s often used as a sexual expression and there’s no word for a high school boy. Similar slang words: JD (Joshi Chūgakusei) 女子...
English isa stress-timed language, which means that we "reduce" certain vowels to an "uhh" sound (/ə/, called the "scha") to make the word smoother to pronounce. Japanese doesn't do this. All vowels will always be pronounced with their "full" sound (unless devoiced, as mentioned ...
movement, play, intricate design, bold colours, lyrical graphics… and emotion – that I literally went weak at the knees when viewing these stunningly beautiful art works. There is somethings so joyful about Spowers designs that instantly draws you in, that makes you smile, that made me cry...
Japanese title has alliteration, with the same character at the beginning of each line, including the name of the little boy, Akira. The title presented by US publisher Chronicle Books is I Can Open It For You, while UK’s Thames Hudson published it as I Can Open That! In fact, it tu...