Forum - View topicGeneral Questions / Identifying Anime.
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braves
![]() Posts: 2309 Location: Puerto Rico (but living in Texas) |
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Ah, thank you very much for your answer, abunai. ^_^
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Full_Metal1923
![]() Posts: 312 Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
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Hopefully someone could answer this here, I don't feel its worth posting as a topic in the Music forums, so here it is:
Does anyone know the names of the members of the Japanese pop group YeLLOW Generation? And, if by any chance can you provide a bit of information on the lovely trio? I read a bit about them on Wiki, however I don't quite trust Wikipedia, so I'd like confirmation on their names, which are supposedly Yuki, Yuko, and Hitomi. Confirmation on this is all I really need but like I mentioned, if possible any additional information on them would be nice. Thanks. ![]() |
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DerekTheRed
![]() Posts: 3544 Location: ::Points to hand:: |
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Well, according to the google translation of their official site their names are Yuko, Snow, and Mi Human. I think Snow = Hitomi, but I'll leave this one to someone who speaks Japanese...
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abunai
Old Regular
![]() Posts: 5463 Location: 露命 |
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It's wise of you not to trust Wikipedia, but in this case, they would appear to be correct. The group's official website (www.yellowgeneration.net) lists the members as: * Yuki, born 1982-02-09 * Yuuko, born 1981-11-20 * Hitomi, born 1985-07-10 - abunai DerekTheRed, letting you play with translation software is like handing a child a box of matches. |
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DerekTheRed
![]() Posts: 3544 Location: ::Points to hand:: |
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What can I say? I'm curious like a cat, that's why they call me whiskers. |
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Full_Metal1923
![]() Posts: 312 Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
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DerekTheRed: Yuki means Snow in Japanese.
abunai: Thanks a lot. This information was essential in an article I'm working so it's greatly appreciated. ![]() |
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dormcat
Encyclopedia Editor
![]() Posts: 9902 Location: New Taipei City, Taiwan, ROC |
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A small correction: the official site seems to adopt the original Hepburn instead of wapuro for the romanization of ユウコ.
Nope, I'm sure you're not. ![]() |
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abunai
Old Regular
![]() Posts: 5463 Location: 露命 |
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So it seems. Doesn't sit right by me, but if that's how they want to do it, then I suppose it's official. "Yuko" it is.
Hmph. You know what happened to the curious cat? - abunai I have enough room to swing a cat. And enough rope, too. |
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dormcat
Encyclopedia Editor
![]() Posts: 9902 Location: New Taipei City, Taiwan, ROC |
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Fixing ANN's Encyclopedia 24/7. |
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Full_Metal1923
![]() Posts: 312 Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
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Speaking of the Encyclopedia, perhaps you should add this information to YeLLOW Generation's page.
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Boomerang Flash
![]() Posts: 1021 |
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This is not really a question about anime, but it's something that obtruded on my notice while watching anime, even though I've counted only three so far. They are men who use the first person pronoun "boku": Muruta Azrael of Gundam Seed, Hikaru Tsurugi of Key the Metal Idol, and Creed Diskence of Black Cat. They are all clearly young and energetic, but they are also obviously adults. They are all also obviously mentally unstable sociopaths with an obsession of some sort. Is this some kind of social stigma, or did I happen to notice three instances of coincidences?
On a side note, the one adult woman who uses this first person pronoun is pretty normal. |
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abunai
Old Regular
![]() Posts: 5463 Location: 露命 |
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Eh, no. You've got that wrong. Let's take the guys first. The personal pronoun 僕 (boku), like all Japanese personal pronouns, isn't one. In fact, all the words that Japanese uses for personal pronouns originally meant something else, and have been pressed into use as pronouns -- something that isn't really a part of original Japanese usage. That's right, no pronouns -- but nouns which act as pronouns. In the case of 僕 (boku), this word originally meant "manservant or lackey". That is, it was a subservient word used to describe oneself -- the equivalent of saying "your humble servant" instead of "I". Today, boku is the male usage for humble or subservient speech, or for boys/young men or men who are lower in the social hierarchy than the person they are speaking to. It is also somehow associated with the 坊っちゃん (bocchan) type, the well-bred young man from a good family (often moneyed). A good example of this would be Ishida Uryuu from Bleach. Because such types sometimes appear as villains or at least temporary bad guys, you may have heard boku used a lot in these circumstances. Pampered rich kid who has it in for the protagonist? He'll either be a loudmouth who calls himself 俺 (ore, the boastul male pronoun), or he'll be the smarmy well-bred type who uses boku. So much for the boys. Now, as for females using boku? Well, there are two instances of this. The first is females who are talking to young boys. If a woman talks to a small boy whose name she doesn't know, she will sometimes call him boku, as if it were a personal name -- because it is standing in for the unknown personal name, just as it might stand in for a (nonexistent) personal pronoun. So a mother, a daycare worker, or someone in a department store talking to a little boy who has gotten lost... they would call the boy boku. But females using boku to describe themselves? Only happens in fiction. There are many instances of fictional characters doing this, because, if done right, it can be unbearably cute. Just think of Ayu in Kanon, if you need an example. But really, it doesn't happen in the real world. Well... I did know one girl who used it, but I'm pretty sure it was very, very deliberate. - abunai Dan-Jo-Dan-Jo-Dan-Jo... |
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Mylene
![]() Posts: 2792 Location: Indiana |
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Although it doesn't really fit into the "real world," I'm pretty sure one of my Japanese instructors mentioned that Utada Hikaru often used "boku" rather than "watashi," and that it was a bit of a trend for awhile for young girls/women to imitate her in this in the late 90s. |
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abunai
Old Regular
![]() Posts: 5463 Location: 露命 |
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Quite true, but honestly... a performer's styles are not indicative of anything "real". Think of Boy George, or Michael Jackson. Sure, people may act in a particular manner, when involved in that plastic-and-tinsel thing called show business, but it has very little bearing on "normality" (such as it is). - abunai I may well be lynched for this, but I don't really care for Utada Hikaru... |
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Alexel
Posts: 3 |
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