god has not given us a spirit of fear images oshi no ko scan 140
In general, -chan is used for young children, close friends, babies, grandparents and sometimes female adolescents. It may also be used towards cute animals, lovers, or youthful women. Chan is never used for strangers or people one has just met. Although traditionally, honorifics are not applied to oneself, some people adopt the childlike affectation of referring to themselves in the third person using -chan (childlike because it suggests that one has not learned to distinguish between names used for oneself and names used by others). For example, a young girl named Kanako might call herself Kanako-chan rather than the first-person pronoun. Tan[edit] Tan (たん) is intended as an even cuter[6] or affectionate variant of -chan. It evokes a small child's mispronunciation of that form of address, or baby talk – similar to how, for example, a speaker of English might use "widdle" instead of "little" when speaking to a baby. Moe anthropomorphisms are often labeled as -tan, e. g. , the commercial mascot Habanero-tan, the manga figure Afghanis-tan or the OS-tans representing operating systems. A more notorious use of the honorific was for the murderer Nevada-tan.ISBN 978-0-8166-7387-2. ^ Lyden, John (2009). The Routledge Companion to Religion and Film. Taylor & Francis. p. 208. ISBN 978-0-415-44853-6. ^ Clements & McCarthy 2006, pp. 184–185. ^ Fontana & Tarò 2007, p. 123.
[SMALL-TEXT]]