Okay, frequently in Japanese I hear people say things after a person's name: "sama", "san", "shi", "sensei". I get the "sensei" one because it's more known to english speakers, but the other ones have me lost. What do they mean?
Printable View
Okay, frequently in Japanese I hear people say things after a person's name: "sama", "san", "shi", "sensei". I get the "sensei" one because it's more known to english speakers, but the other ones have me lost. What do they mean?
Let me Google that for you, Fiel-chan~
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_honorifics
They denote speaker's closeness to another person. Like If I called you Paul-chan or Paul-kun, it'd mean I'm very close to you, like a best friend or something.
d'oh. I deserved that. Thanks. :f4:
Honorifics mang, they are very strict about them over there.
Cool people use -tan.
-tan is just for moe purposes. You usually see it in anime as referring to cute or young characters, and it's sometimes used IRL for mascots and such.
I think there's a section on -tan, -chama, etc. in that Wikipedia article linked above.
EDIT: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanes...alk_variations