What does Chan and Kun etc mean in Japanese?

When speaking japanese, what does kun, chan, san, and other stuff mean?

  • like saying kun, chan, san, after names and stuff....like kim-san. or chen-kun

  • Answer:

    ♡It's a Japanese honorific title. "An honorific is a word or expression that conveys esteem or respect and is used in addressing or referring to a person." I suppose you just want to know how to use basics like "san" ? ☆san: It basically means Mr. or Mrs. You use it for either gender. (Mr./Mrs. Saitoh = Saitoh-san) ☆chan: Use this for children, particularly little girls. You could get away with using it for girls who are younger than you or maybe the same age. (Mari-chan) ☆kun: Use this with little kids, particularly little boys. Same as -chan. (Taka-kun) ☆sensei: Teacher. You use this for any kind of teacher or instructor. (Aoki-sensei) ☆sama: This is a very formal title and not used that often. It's reserved for very important people. In Japanese, the word for god is "Kamisama." ~There are also a few more... I live in Japan and use these titles everyday!(*^o^*) Hope this helps! Take a look at the reference site for more info.♡

amcheung... at Yahoo! Answers Visit the source

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Other answers

These are some frequently used ones and what they mean: -chan (chahn): Small or baby. Used among very close friends and relatives, especially females. -kohai (ko-hah-ee): One's junior. Usually substituted with –kun or -chan. -kun (kun): Used among very close friends and relatives, especially males. -sama (sah-mah): Lord. Used when addressing people of utmost respect or when referring to gods. Usually employed in concurrence with a title but can also be used with a name. -san (sahn): A close equivalent to Mr. and Mrs. Used as a respectful method of addressing people of similar status. -senpai (sen-pah-ee): Upperclassman. Used in relation to fellow classmates of higher level or age. -sensei (sen-say): Teacher, master or doctor. Used either at school or while being involved in a discipline or art. I hope this helps you =)

mumbler

it's basically making a formal name a nickname...its an informal way to say someone's name. Say someone's name was Liz...it would be like calling them Lizzy.

CuriousLikeACat

those have different meanings.. but they always come after a name.. its like when we say mr. or ms.(sum1's name) or whatever. 4 ex., -sama is 2 show great respect, like ur boss or god, -chan is 4 a girl or a little boy, -sensei is teacher, and there are lots more..

cherry

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