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There are 32 total results for your Males search in the dictionary.
| Characters | Pronunciation Romanization |
Simple Dictionary Definition |
君 see styles |
jun jun1 chün kun くん |
More info & calligraphy: June(suffix) (1) (after the name of a male of equal or lower status) Mr; master; boy; (suffix) (2) (after the name of a female of lower status; used by males in formal settings) Ms; miss; (suffix) (3) (archaism) (still used among members of the Japanese Diet) sir; madam; (personal name) Kunji Prince, noble, ideal man or woman; translit. kun. |
儂 侬 see styles |
nóng nong2 nung washi わし |
you (Wu dialect); I, me (classical) (pn,adj-no) (kana only) I; me (used by elderly males) |
字 see styles |
zì zi4 tzu aza あざ |
letter; symbol; character; word; CL:個|个[ge4]; courtesy or style name traditionally given to males aged 20 in dynastic China (1) character (esp. kanji); letter; written text; (2) handwriting; penmanship; (3) (as 〜の字) (See ほの字) the ... word (e.g. "the L word" = "love"); (place-name) Aza akṣara, 阿乞史囉; 阿刹羅; a letter, character; akṣara is also used for a vowel, especially the vowed 'a' as distinguished from the other vowels; a word, words. |
両君 see styles |
ryoukun / ryokun りょうくん |
(1) (usu. referring to males of equal or lower status) two people; (2) two monarchs; two rulers |
人丁 see styles |
rén dīng ren2 ding1 jen ting |
number of people in a family; population; (old) adult males; male servants |
共修 see styles |
kyoushuu / kyoshu きょうしゅう |
(noun/participle) studying together (esp. of males and females); coeducation |
冠禮 冠礼 see styles |
guàn lǐ guan4 li3 kuan li |
the capping ceremony, a Confucian coming of age ceremony for males dating from pre-Qin times, performed when a boy reaches the age of 20, involving the ritual placing of caps on the head of the young man |
哥們 哥们 see styles |
gē men ge1 men5 ko men |
Brothers!; brethren; dude (colloquial); brother (diminutive form of address between males) |
役男 see styles |
yì nán yi4 nan2 i nan |
males eligible for military service; draftee; abbr. for 役齡男子|役龄男子 |
洒家 see styles |
sǎ jiā sa3 jia1 sa chia |
(archaic) I; me (used by males during the Song and Yuan dynasties) |
灑家 洒家 see styles |
sǎ jiā sa3 jia1 sa chia |
(archaic) I; me (used by males during the Song and Yuan dynasties) |
父母 see styles |
fù mǔ fu4 mu3 fu mu fubo ふぼ |
father and mother; parents father and mother; parents; (surname) Fubo pitṛ-mātṛ, father and mother, parents; 無明 ignorance is referred to as father, and 貪愛 desire, or concupiscence, as mother, the two— ignorance and concupiscence— being the parents of all delusion and karma. Samādhi is also referred to as father, and praj na (wisdom) as mother, the parents of all knowledge and virtue. In the vast interchanges of rebirth all have been or are my parents, therefore all males are my father and all females my mother: 一切男女我父母 see 心地觀經 2. |
留拏 留拿 see styles |
liun á liun2 a2 liun a rudora |
ruṇṇa-paṇḍakas, castrated males. |
直衣 see styles |
noushi; naoshi; chokui / noshi; naoshi; chokui のうし; なおし; ちょくい |
everyday robes worn by males of the imperial family, nobility, etc. (from the Heian period onward) |
貴公 see styles |
kikou / kiko きこう |
(pronoun) you (primarily used by males when addressing their male equals or inferiors); (personal name) Takahiro |
鶏姦 see styles |
keikan / kekan けいかん |
homosexual sex between males; buggery; sodomy |
のんけ see styles |
nonke のんけ |
(masculine speech) (slang) heterosexual male (as viewed by homosexual males) |
国民服 see styles |
kokuminfuku こくみんふく |
(hist) national uniform (such as mandated for Japanese males in 1940) |
般茶迦 see styles |
pán chá jiā pan2 cha2 jia1 p`an ch`a chia pan cha chia hanchaka |
[Note: The middle character is erroneous; it should be 荼. Same with the next entry.] paṇḍaka. The general name for eunuchs. The five classes with various degrees of sexual impotence: (1) 扇搋 ṣaṇḍha (ṣaṇḍha paṇḍaka); by birth impotent. (2) 留拏 rugṇa or ruṇḍa paṇḍaka; 'maimed, ' i.e. emasculated males. (3) 砂梨沙掌拏 īrṣyā (īrṣyā paṇḍaka); those whose sexual desires are only aroused by jealousy. (4) 半擇迦 paṇḍaka are eunuchs in general, but in this category are described as hermaphrodites. (5) 博叉 pakṣa (pakṣa pāṇḍaka); impotent during one-half of the month. A newer classification distinguishes those with incomplete from those with complete organs; the incomplete being (1) ṣaṇḍha, or jātipaṇḍaka as above; and (2) emasculated males; the complete are the others; the fifth being stimulated when bathing or evacuating. Other forms: 般吒; 半托; 半擇迦 tr. 黃門. |
五種不男 五种不男 see styles |
wǔ zhǒng bù nán wu3 zhong3 bu4 nan2 wu chung pu nan goshu funan |
The five kinds of 般荼迦 paṇḍakas, i. e. eunuchs, or impotent males: by birth; emasculation; uncontrollable emission; hermaphrodite; impotent for half the month; they are known as 扇搋 Sandha; 留拏 ? Runda; 伊梨沙掌拏 Irṣyāpaṇḍaka; 半擇迦 Paṇḍaka; 博叉 Pakṣapaṇḍaka; there are numerous subdivisions. |
五闡提羅 五阐提罗 see styles |
wǔ chǎn tí luó wu3 chan3 ti2 luo2 wu ch`an t`i lo wu chan ti lo go sendaira |
The five ṣaṇḍhilās, i. e. five bad monks who died, went to the hells, and were reborn as ṣaṇḍhilās or imperfect males; also 五扇提羅. |
男子禁制 see styles |
danshikinsei / danshikinse だんしきんせい |
exclusion of males; (being) closed to men |
男左女右 see styles |
nán zuǒ nǚ yòu nan2 zuo3 nu:3 you4 nan tso nü yu |
the left is for males, the right is for females (traditional saying) |
男難の相 see styles |
dannannosou / dannannoso だんなんのそう |
(exp,n) (colloquialism) (See 女難の相) appearance or demeanor that attracts unsavory males |
草食男子 see styles |
soushokudanshi / soshokudanshi そうしょくだんし |
(1) (abbreviation) young men who are not competitive as in the traditional male stereotype, including in the avid pursuit of money and sex, and who may also be kind, co-operative and family-oriented; (2) (abbreviation) (slang) men who pretend they aren't interested in women; spineless males; men with no balls |
装飾男子 see styles |
soushokudanshi / soshokudanshi そうしょくだんし |
(irregular kanji usage) (1) (abbreviation) young men who are not competitive as in the traditional male stereotype, including in the avid pursuit of money and sex, and who may also be kind, co-operative and family-oriented; (2) (abbreviation) (slang) men who pretend they aren't interested in women; spineless males; men with no balls |
裝飾男子 see styles |
soushokudanshi / soshokudanshi そうしょくだんし |
(irregular kanji usage) (1) (abbreviation) young men who are not competitive as in the traditional male stereotype, including in the avid pursuit of money and sex, and who may also be kind, co-operative and family-oriented; (2) (abbreviation) (slang) men who pretend they aren't interested in women; spineless males; men with no balls |
重男輕女 重男轻女 see styles |
zhòng nán qīng nǚ zhong4 nan2 qing1 nu:3 chung nan ch`ing nü chung nan ching nü |
to value males and attach less importance to females (idiom) |
逆セクハラ see styles |
gyakusekuhara ぎゃくセクハラ |
reverse sexual harassment; sexual harassment of males by females |
Variations: |
otokotachi おとこたち |
men; males |
Variations: |
karera かれら |
(pronoun) (usu. in ref. to males or a mixed-sex group) they; them |
Variations: |
otokotachi おとこたち |
men; males |
Entries with 2nd row of characters: The 2nd row is Simplified Chinese.
This page contains 32 results for "Males" in Chinese and/or Japanese.Information about this dictionary:
Apparently, we were the first ones who were crazy enough to think that western people might want a combined Chinese, Japanese, and Buddhist dictionary.
A lot of westerners can't tell the difference between Chinese and Japanese - and there is a reason for that. Chinese characters and even whole words were borrowed by Japan from the Chinese language in the 5th century. Much of the time, if a word or character is used in both languages, it will have the same or a similar meaning. However, this is not always true. Language evolves, and meanings independently change in each language.
Example: The Chinese character 湯 for soup (hot water) has come to mean bath (hot water) in Japanese. They have the same root meaning of "hot water", but a 湯屋 sign on a bathhouse in Japan would lead a Chinese person to think it was a "soup house" or a place to get a bowl of soup. See this: Japanese Bath House
This dictionary uses the EDICT and CC-CEDICT dictionary files.
EDICT data is the property of the Electronic Dictionary Research and Development Group, and is used in conformance with the Group's
license.
Chinese Buddhist terms come from Dictionary of Chinese Buddhist Terms by William Edward Soothill and Lewis Hodous. This is commonly referred to as "Soothill's'". It was first published in 1937 (and is now off copyright so we can use it here). Some of these definitions may be misleading, incomplete, or dated, but 95% of it is good information. Every professor who teaches Buddhism or Eastern Religion has a copy of this on their bookshelf. We incorporated these 16,850 entries into our dictionary database ourselves (it was lot of work).
Combined, these cover 1,007,753 Japanese, Chinese, and Buddhist characters, words, idioms, names, placenames, and short phrases.
Just because a word appears here does not mean it is appropriate for a tattoo, your business name, etc. Please consult a professional before doing anything stupid with this data.
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No warranty as to the correctness, potential vulgarity, or clarity is expressed or implied. We did not write any of these definitions (though we occasionally act as a contributor/editor to the CC-CEDICT project). You are using this dictionary for free, and you get what you pay for.
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