Cute Japanese Girls and the Third Person
One of the cuter -- or possibly creepier -- things that Japanese girls do is refer to themselves in the third person. A good example of this in anime is the character Fuko from Clannad After Story, who says "Fuko" in reference to herself despite disliking it when people treat her like a child, which is of course part of her moe charm. Usually, Japanese girls will use their own names in place of a first-person pronoun at a young age, then when they start school and begin interacting with other girls will switch to atashi, a feminine version of watashi, the most common word for "I" in Japanese, or possibly the slightly masculine-sounding boku if she's the tomboy type. Since my own daughter still calls herself by her own name despite being in junior high school, I thought I'd ask her about it. "Well, I can't go around calling myself atashi [I]," she told me. "It would sound too grown-up, and it wouldn't go with my personality at all. It sounds much cuter this way." It's really amazing how the Japanese have been able to make a simple concept like "I" so incredibly complex.

The character Fuko from Clannad refers to herself in the third person. Is that cute?



8 Comments:
Or, Fuuko could have settled on "atai" and sound like libertine. Although I don't know why she also said that "watashi" is also perverted. I guess that's supposed to be "moe."
9:00 PM
Yes, that scene was really out there. Funny to have the series end with her, who did almost nothing in the 2nd season.
12:18 AM
I happened across a Japanese man in an airport once reading a whole book about the complex realm of the personal pronoun in Japanese.
An example of what you lose watching dubs, when Ranma acts like a girl when he changes into a girl in one episode and starts using the feminine pronoun.
6:30 AM
Yes, Ranma is a good example. Of course it's got to be hella difficult to try to express the feminine/masculine speech accurately.
9:42 AM
how about a girl who is 29 (but still like shes 16) talks in the 3rd person? yet from what she knows from family, isnt japanese, but japan feels like home to her and knows she must "return" some day?? (but has never been there..)
12:26 AM
Haha, sounds "kawaii" to me.
1:33 AM
I encountered this the first time on Su Yin's site: http://cookingismypassion.blogspot.com/ She's in KL, Malaysia.
I read her regularly (she makes the cutest cakes... kawaiiiii) and at first wondered who this "Su" was that she always talked about. ^_^ Then I remembered that young Japanese girls do this. It fits her and her upbeat personality.
7:52 AM
Tarzan wonder why people think this odd.
10:24 PM
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