07:21 Oct 25, 2006 |
English to Japanese translations [PRO] Slang / Japanese youth, college and street slang | |||||
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| Selected response from: tyamamur Japan Local time: 15:32 | ||||
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Summary of answers provided | ||||
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4 | Huryo |
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1 | See URL |
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Discussion entries: 4 | |
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japanese slang for See URL Explanation: http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/フーリガン -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 16 hrs (2006-10-26 00:12:29 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hooligan -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 5 days (2006-10-30 23:33:53 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- For Japanese, "huryo", "gorotsuki", "yotamono", and "akutou" give negative impression. Especially, gorotuski implies a member of gang group such as Yakuza. |
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japanese slang for Huryo Explanation: The first couple of words that came up to my mind were huryo (不良) and waru (ワル). -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 20 hrs (2006-10-26 03:57:17 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Both may not look good-natured but often turn out to be so. They are used to describe younger people. Gorotsuki, however, is more associated with a relatively older man who has no job and does something bad. Or maybe this helps better?: http://www.answers.com/topic/hooligan -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 7 days (2006-11-02 06:27:39 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Each of the terms you mentioned may have some positive connotations but it really depends on how it is used in the context. I now think it is quite difficult to find Japanese terms that fit exactly in your definition for hooligan. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 10 days (2006-11-05 05:12:38 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Mavericker, that was fine - I wish I could have come up with any better ideas. Cannot find anything perfect for "good-natured rough." You might want to be descriptive in a phrase. |
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