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In romance anime, in particular, you can be very clued into social subtext by keeping track of a character’s progression from san to kun to no honorifics at all. Again, the choice of honorifics tells you a lot about how one character feels about another. In One Piece, Nami always refers to Sanji as “Sanji-kun,” even though Sanji is technically one year older than her. This clues us into two insights: that Nami has a soft spot for Sanji, but also that she knows she can manipulate him to do what she wants, as if she were a senpai (see below!) and he were a younger boy. Chan Chan is kinda-sorta like the female version of kun, except that it’s cuter-feeling. It also can be a bit broader than kun, gender-wise, in referring to any child or pet—specifically because of that cuteness connotation.That night, Boruto sensed Kawaki had left the house and used a shadow clone as a stand in. Wondering why none of the sensory guards picked up on this, Boruto wondered why only he could detect the deception. Not wanting Kawaki to get into trouble, he confronted the clone. He forced the issue and exposed Kawaki's ruse to his father. Against both Naruto's and Kawaki's wishes, Boruto went after Kawaki, as he was the only who knew the direction Kawaki was going, hoping that Konoha would track him to Kawaki. Boruto draws out Momoshiki's power. Boruto arrived just in time to stop Code from taking Kawaki with him, kicking him aside before scolding Kawaki for his recklessness. Boruto and Kawaki argued over each other's actions. Kawaki was willing to leave with Code, but Boruto refused it. Despite Kawaki wishing to do it in order to protect Naruto, Boruto said what he was doing was protect Kawaki. Code introduced himself to Boruto, revering him as Momoshiki's vessel, but still intending to sacrifice him to cultivate a God Tree.
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