ShÅjo

ShÅjo, shojo or shoujo (少女 shÅjo) is a Japanese word for "girl".[1]
The word is originally derived from a Chinese expression written with the same characters.[nb 1] The Chinese characters (少 and 女) literally mean young/little and woman respectively.[2] In Japanese, these kanji refer specifically to a young woman approximately 7–18 years old.[3]
Etymology
Like most kanji compounds, the term shÅjo is borrowed from Classical Chinese characters. The original term is written as "少女", which could be pronounced as shà o nÇš in Mandarin (pinyin romanization), so nyÅ in Korean (McCune-Reischauer romanization), thiếu nữ in Vietnamese, and shÅjo in Japanese (Hepburn romanization).
The earliest surviving written record of the term 少女 is on the Book of the Later Han, published in China in the 5th century, in Chapter 86, The myth of Yao, referring to young girls.[4]
ç›¤ç“ ç¨®ï¼Œæ˜”å¸å𳿙‚患犬戎入寇, 乃訪募天下,有能得犬戎之將å³å°‡è»é 者,購黃金åƒéŽ°ï¼Œé‚‘è¬å®¶ï¼Œåˆå¦»ä»¥å°‘女.[5]Translation: The myth of Yao: the country is being invaded by barbarians, the king is looking for warriors who are capable of taking the head of the general of the invading army, and for this the king will award (a) thousand Yi [6] of gold, (a) myriad of houses and young girl(s) as their wife/wives.
In the 7th century, the word was introduced into the Japanese language through the adoption of the Chinese-style RitsuryÅ legal system, where it referred to females between the ages of 17 and 20.[3][7]
Modern usage
In legal settings, shÅjo is a subset of shÅnen (meaning "minor") and refers to any female juvenile who has not reached the age of 20.[8]
In Japan, the word shÅjo has many applications outside of the law. It refers to anything of, for, or about school-age girls.[9] Examples include shÅjo manga, shÅjo culture,[10] shÅjo novels, shÅjo hobbies, and shÅjo fashions, among others.
In popular media
Manga
- Binetsu ShÅjo, a shÅjo manga series by Kaho Miyasaka
- ShÅjo Sect, a Japanese adult manga series written and illustrated by manga author Ken Kurogane.
Music
- BishÅjo Shinri, a song about the psychology of shojo written by Tsunku, published in °C-ute's 2007 single Meguru Koi no Kisetsu.
See also
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Look up 少女 or shÅjo in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- BishÅjo
- Josei
- Girl
- Lolicon
- ShÅjo manga, a Japanese manga demographic
- Shoujocon, a former anime convention held annually from 2000–2003
- ShÅnen, shÅjo's male counterpart, includes legal definition of shÅnen and shÅjo
- Women in Japan
- Yamato Nadeshiko
Footnotes
- ↑ Because of the difficulty of inputting macrons on many computers, "shôjo" and "shöjo" are also common and acceptable renderings, although "shÅjo" is preferred.)
References
- ↑ The word girl in English has complex meanings, and care is needed in its use. See Francoeur, R.T., Martha Cornog, Timothy Perper, and Norman A. Scherzer 1995 The Complete Dictionary of Sexology, New Expanded Edition. New York: Continuum.
- ↑ Yuen Ren Chao and Lien Sheng Yong. 1962. Concise Dictionary of Spoken Chinese. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. (No ISBN). 少 is radical #42, page 64. 女 is radical #38, page 54, meaning woman or female. 女 can be used as either a noun or an adjective.
- 1 2 Shogakukan Daijisen Editorial Staff (1998), Daijisen (大辞泉) (Dictionary of the Japanese language), Revised Edition. Tokyo: Shogakukan. ISBN 978-4-09-501212-4.
- ↑ Chinese Dictionary, Department of Education of Republic of China
- ↑ 後漢書 å—è »è¥¿å—夷傳 Department of Asian History, Nagoya University Accessed 2008-09-14
- ↑ 1 Yi (鎰) equals 315 gram Chinese dictionary online
- ↑ 清水民å『女ã®åã¯ã©ã†è‚²ã¤ã‹ : 少女期ãã®ä¸–界ã¨ç™ºé”ã€æ–°æ—¥æœ¬å‡ºç‰ˆç¤¾ã€1989å¹´4月ã€ISBN 4-406-01723-2
- ↑ Public Prosecutors Office, Japan.
- ↑ Shogakukan Dictionary Editorial Staff (2003), Tsukaikata no wakaru ruigo reikai jiten (ä½¿ã„æ–¹ã®åˆ†ã‹ã‚‹é¡žèªžä¾‹è§£è¾žå…¸) ("A Dictionary of Synonyms in Japanese"), New Edition. Tokyo: Shogakukan. ISBN 978-4-09-505522-0.
- ↑ 山崎ã¾ã©ã‹ã€Žã‚ªãƒ¼ãƒ‰ãƒªãƒ¼ã¨ãƒ•ランソワーズ-乙女カルãƒãƒ£ãƒ¼å…¥é–€ã€(晶文社ã€ISBN 4-7949-6518-4ã€2002å¹´