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  • In this video I'm going to share with you some recent Japanese slang

  • So we're going in a little bit of a different direction on this one compared to most of the videos on my channel

  • But I thought it might be fun to share some of the language and slang

  • The kids are using today for you guys that are maybe interested in coming to Japan some of you that are studying Japanese

  • Or maybe that you're just online with Japanese friends

  • This video may help you learn some new words, or maybe just get a better understanding to the words that you already know

  • but before we start like always if you want to help support the channel check out the Japan merch

  • If you want to see what I'm doing on the daily check out my Instagram account and if you have any questions about Japan

  • Check out the discord community and since I'm not a native Japanese speaker who better to help me than Maiko

  • So Maiko, can you come over here? She always comes in from this side, but then wants to sit on this side

  • This is my good size

  • Hi guys. There you go. Maiko

  • So basically in this video I picked a few words that have been kind of popular

  • Recently or some of them are probably I guess within the last year it's been around

  • So i'm sure you probably know before I knew that these words

  • um, so let's go through the first one and one of the first words that I wanted to discuss is

  • So this one you see mainly online and it's pian

  • Basically, it's when you're sad, you're easy, then you're a little bit sad

  • So it means to like it's a sound you make when you cry like Japanese really like

  • Yeah, it could be like just an anime sound or manga has a lot of like cute sounds right? Yeah, okay so it's like

  • So, I don't really use this honestly it's really really numerous I think it's actually high school kids started to use it

  • Yeah, like last year or like two years ago. But anyways, it started with

  • pian, right and this uh

  • It's like the

  • Characters that you used to make before emoji became popular so they would yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah

  • Yeah parentheses and equal marks and just like all these to make faces and so there's one there's like pian and with that word

  • It's this it came from this and then it became shorter pian and now people use it like pm the pound this phrase

  • Means it's beyond pian so pong when you call it, it means pons. That means like it's more so

  • There's like more than sex

  • You made a stamp line stamp with yukon

  • Oh, really yeah, we should make it. Yeah we should would you guys like to see line stamps of wolfie

  • Yeah, let's do it. Yeah, it's so popular in Japan to create live stuff with your kids

  • But then like there are people who get really annoyed by it, you know

  • Like it's just I would love to respond to all my friends with my baby's face

  • But they're gonna be annoyed I'm like I don't wanna see your baby

  • Let us know if you guys want us to make lime stamps and we'll like we'll do it again. Well, i'll make it

  • Yeah, just for us. Oh my god, i'll make it for us. Okay use and if you guys want to use it, go ahead. Yeah

  • I know a lot of you guys don't you know don't care

  • So this next word is kind of useful, I think I think it's super useful. Yeah, it's it's the word

  • Originally from like something that's kind of sentimental something that is kind of nostalgic

  • something that you know, like it's very like complex and that like kind of

  • Sad, but beautiful, yes, but it slowly evolved into now

  • Just being cool. Like if you were to say, oh, that's cool

  • You can use it for anything like you see a new camera or something. You're like

  • It's like a new

  • It means cool. But now it's like

  • But yeah, it also actually has like a little bit of like anime otaku kind of feeling to me

  • But that's why it's kind of cool at the same time, you know

  • Like emoji I didn't start using until I met it right here. Oh, yeah, really?

  • Cause like you think maybe you're having a conversation. Maybe you're making that video the day in the life video. Yeah. Um, he said,

  • Uh, so he said it

  • Oh, that's when you first heard it I know people use it, but I never seen the person in a real life using it

  • Then I started it I'm like okay, he's cool when the moon hits your eye it's like a pizza pie

  • So this next one, uh, it's really hard to explain it's just kind of like an action word, it's baby tuppy, baby

  • People on like Instagram and Tik Tok and they would actually put the straw and the tapioca

  • Yeah drinks and the bubba drinks. It was just like baby tapi

  • Or is my timing off

  • There you go

  • I actually this is so young. I think all the teenagers do it I i'm way older than this

  • I think they do it on Tik Tok so I don't even use Tik Tok baby

  • So the next slide that I wanted to mention is yokya and inkya miyokia meaning that someone has like a

  • Positive and like upbeat energy right happy personality and then inkjia someone that's on the opposite which is kind of like a negative

  • And dark character, right? Yeah or more like

  • Quiet a lot of these um words that are going to come up I'm kind of like on the older end of the spectrum

  • So I don't really use a lot of these phrases not this one though like at school

  • like there's like hierarchies right like the cool kids and like not cool kids nerds would call themselves like oh,

  • I don't think like yoga people would call themselves yoga. It's more like inca people would call them like yoga like ah

  • So basically when you use it you call yourself

  • Yeah, and then when you when you actually like put someone up you call them yogya. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah

  • Let's say like Jennifer asked me out for this party

  • But like all the yuki people is coming so I don't know. I'm inca so I don't want to go

  • I don't fit in also probably worth noting that um kia the part of it means like character

  • Oh, yeah at the end of it and yo and in is basically yin. Yang. Yeah in English. I think I'm yogya, you're

  • Absolutely, okay

  • You're annoying

  • So the next word is jiwadu and it's like a joke

  • That's not like whoa, that made me like laugh, but then like little by little it basically means funny

  • It doesn't make you laugh right away, but it makes you laugh little by little but it means funny

  • But let's say like there's a picture with like a funny mole or something

  • It's not super super funny but like you stare at it for like I don't know like 30 minutes

  • You started to become funny kind of thing

  • Yeah, so you just said you wouldn't according but I would never make fun of someone small

  • So jiwadu came from award 2 at jiwajiwa. It basically means gradually like slowly. Yeah

  • It's like a sound of bubbling. No

  • It's not

  • What's the word then when it bubbles

  • Learn something new every day

  • Really really trendy it's something that is something that you hear like pretty much everywhere these days and it's mitsu

  • So basically you hear this kind of everywhere it's either on, you know, the news or hear from your fans just because you know

  • There's a lot of pandemic talk and all this stuff that's going on the idea

  • That in order to prevent the transfer of coronavirus or infecting others. They have kind of this venn diagram

  • Let me just go over here a little bit

  • Basically you have right here three different kind of circles and you have like to stay away from a crowded room

  • Stay away from closed room or like a room. That's not ventilated

  • And the third one is when people are talking too close. You should stay away from that

  • And so the government is telling people to avoid these three meetings

  • When you see those like one of them or two of them or three of them you say to this they were actually like

  • Tokyo

  • Tokyo Mayor. Yeah

  • Had a press conference with like all the reporters around her. It had so many people this is like me to dismiss this mrs

  • Missus, right? Yeah, so it's so funny

  • You can't see that like now kids are using it like not thinking of corona or like yeah

  • They get of like risk of corona just use it in everyday life

  • Yeah, so like basically if you don't want someone talking too close to you. You just say mitsu desu. Yeah, let's say

  • You're like a stinky old boss who talks to

  • Me really close and like you're like this and I mean to mitsu desu

  • Younger boss is it okay if I have if I was like a younger good looking boss talking closely to you?

  • Sure. No

  • You would have do you think you could like use it every day?

  • Like if you're in the um supermarket and someone's like standing too close to you in line. You're just like me today

  • That's gonna mean

  • If you use it outside of your house to a stranger, it's just very kind of like get away from me

  • I don't want to get corona from you

  • So this line is men hera manhattan

  • It's short for

  • Mental health someone that is like just mentally sick right something not right in the head

  • But you can also use it in like attention horror kind of ah, yeah everyday life.

  • I hear it in like a love life situation

  • Something's wrong with his head his head. Yeah, but like he's not technically mentally sick something's wrong with it

  • Yeah, something's wrong with it. Like you can call a girl man head up and she's like keep on calling you every 10 minutes

  • Yeah, you're pretty much just saying that the person is crazy, right? Yeah. Have you ever like worked with someone? That was manhattan?

  • Oh hell yes

  • Someone's always mad person who's always yelled at me

  • usually I do

  • I could see why a person would yell at me. How do you forget your passwords?

  • that's one of the things is like I actually have to manage all her passwords for her because she

  • forgets them all the time when we first met she had like all of her passwords were the same for

  • Everything so that you can remember he made me change it so I can't remember anymore. What am I gonna do?

  • But at least you know, someone can't hack your PC

  • Yeah

  • I can't even hack my PC

  • And the last one is KP I don't even know if a lot of people use it

  • But we were reading online and some people apparently use it and it's just a shortened way to say. Kanpai

  • so maybe

  • a lot of you probably already know what combine means means like cheer, especially when you you know,

  • Raise your glasses you shorten it by just saying KP but I mean, maybe we should start using it

  • Maybe like I think it's cool though. Yeah. Yeah, maybe

  • If it's if it's not so popular, maybe we can make it popular. So when you guys say kampai instead of saying kampai you say

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  • KP

In this video I'm going to share with you some recent Japanese slang

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it