flonnebonne (
flonnebonne) wrote2007-06-25 09:23 pm
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Hikago Kanji BLARGH
I should have been studying Japanese tonight, but who am I kidding, I only study Japanese when I'm incredibly bored. So instead, I stared at this list of Hikaru no Go character names, kanji included. And I noticed that Hikaru, Sai, and Akari's family names contain the character 藤, which apparently means "wisteria," and apparently wisteria is a lovely hanging purple flower, which I never knew until I came to Japan because I am an ignorant lout.
(I've also learned that there's such a thing as a "rape blossom," which I think is actually just a horrible way of saying "canola flower." The Japanese word is much nicer: "nanohana.")
Anyway, back to Hikago...the character 藤 is the "dou" in Shindou and the "fuji" in Fujiwara and Fujisaki. Cool, huh? Not so cool is the fact that 藤 also appears in a mostly unimportant Kaioh kid's name (Itou, if you care to know. He doesn't even have a given name). So yeah, probably not such an uncommon kanji.
Another interesting thing: Hikaru and Akira are written in katakana (whut?), which makes me wonder what kind of crack their parents were smoking when they named their kids back in the crazy 'eighties. But maybe it's common in manga? Or maybe I'm just sheltered because I live in the countryside and in Tokyo there are actually zillions of young plebes with katakana-ized names who are all striving for the Hand of God together in perfect synchrony (not like that) without me knowing about it. Or maybe Hikaru is named after Utada Hikaru, the poor slob, so his name is written in katakana like hers is.
(Btw, that wasn't a slur against Utada Hikaru, I actually like her.)
One more thing: Kaneko, the volleyball girl from the Haze go club...Kaneko is apparently her family name. Her full name is Kaneko Masako. What a girly family name...usually the "ko" ending is only on girls' given names. Her kanji looks kind of silly too: 金子正子. It means something like "gold child righteous child."
日本語分かねえええええ。 ("I dunno Japanese") <--------------I dunno if I even wrote that correctly.
[Edit] The character 藤 seems to be really, really common in names, now that I'm paying attention. It's often used in the name Satou (佐藤), for example, which is the most common family name in Japan.
(I've also learned that there's such a thing as a "rape blossom," which I think is actually just a horrible way of saying "canola flower." The Japanese word is much nicer: "nanohana.")
Anyway, back to Hikago...the character 藤 is the "dou" in Shindou and the "fuji" in Fujiwara and Fujisaki. Cool, huh? Not so cool is the fact that 藤 also appears in a mostly unimportant Kaioh kid's name (Itou, if you care to know. He doesn't even have a given name). So yeah, probably not such an uncommon kanji.
Another interesting thing: Hikaru and Akira are written in katakana (whut?), which makes me wonder what kind of crack their parents were smoking when they named their kids back in the crazy 'eighties. But maybe it's common in manga? Or maybe I'm just sheltered because I live in the countryside and in Tokyo there are actually zillions of young plebes with katakana-ized names who are all striving for the Hand of God together in perfect synchrony (not like that) without me knowing about it. Or maybe Hikaru is named after Utada Hikaru, the poor slob, so his name is written in katakana like hers is.
(Btw, that wasn't a slur against Utada Hikaru, I actually like her.)
One more thing: Kaneko, the volleyball girl from the Haze go club...Kaneko is apparently her family name. Her full name is Kaneko Masako. What a girly family name...usually the "ko" ending is only on girls' given names. Her kanji looks kind of silly too: 金子正子. It means something like "gold child righteous child."
日本語分かねえええええ。 ("I dunno Japanese") <--------------I dunno if I even wrote that correctly.
[Edit] The character 藤 seems to be really, really common in names, now that I'm paying attention. It's often used in the name Satou (佐藤), for example, which is the most common family name in Japan.
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Oooh, that bit about Kaneko's interesting. Hmm, I might squirrel that away and use it in a fic. :D
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I wonder if Kaneko likes her own name. I bet there's a backstory in that.
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As for Utada Hikaru, it is possible that people use the katakana to hide their real names. Utada isn't a very common surname. Perhaps using her name in katakana alaso helps make her accessible to those who are lazy about kanji.
I have a student whose last name is Kaneko. ^_^ (I also have a student called Kunimitsu, and another with the family name of Tezuka. I have NOT met a Tezuka Kunimitsu, but a friend over at AEON has. He even looked like Tezzie, she said. XD <3 Anyway.) I don't think the Japanese notice the last names. Did you know Kaede is a BOY's name? I always thought it was female ... may be a unisex thing.
I am rambling, aren't I? XD Sorry.
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I was actually surprised that Akira's name was in katakana not kanji seeing Touya Kouyo seems to be quite the tradionalist.
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Searching in the net, I learnt also that in Japan wisteria is a symbol for tender friendship; this is so very appropriate for Hikaru, Sai and Akari, isn't it?
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Kanji for Akira has as many as ten different kanji, all pronounced the same. Why give Akira one meaning to his name when he could possibly have all ten?
Probably the same thing for Hikaru at any rate.
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Re: ...
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Of course, I can't verify this 100%, but I've read that CLAMP had this issue with Kodansha when they started Card Captor Sakura, which was their first (and arguably their only) kid-targeted work.
So after barging in on a month old post for that totally off-topic discourse, can I be sure that the version I linked above is the version you would prefer to be read for iHikago?
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