my home hero tv series
Anime
News Network. March 6, 2015. Archived from the original on March 16, 2015. Retrieved March 13, 2015. "New York Times Manga Best
Seller List, May 3–9". Anime News Network. Retrieved December 17, 2022. Episode 40: Pineda, Rafael Antonio (
January 22, 2022). "Japanese Animation TV Ranking, January 10–16". Anime News Network. Retrieved December 17, 2022.
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Babies, moe anthropomorphisms Senpai (先輩、せんぱい) Senior Senior colleague and student or classmate Sensei (先生、せんせい) Teacher / Master (in the sense of "master and disciple") / Doctor / Professor Used to refer to teachers as well as people who are experts in their respective fields, whether doctors, artists or lawyers. Hakase (博士、はかせ) Doctor or PhD Persons
with very high academic expertise Heika (陛下、へいか) Your Majesty Emperor, Empress, Empress Dowager or Grand Empress Dowager Denka (殿下、でんか) Your Imperial Highness Princes and princesses of the Japanese Imperial Family Kakka (閣下、かっか) Your Excellency Used to address non-royal heads of state and government and other high-ranking government officials (ambassadors, cabinet ministers, and other high officials such as the United Nations Secretary-General or generals in an army). San[edit] Endō-san tanjōbi omedetō (Happy Birthday, Mr. Endō) San (さん), sometimes pronounced han (はん) in Kansai dialect, is the most commonplace honorific and is a title of respect typically used between
equals of any age. Although the closest analog in English are the honorifics "Mr. ", "Miss", "Ms. ", or "Mrs. ", -san is almost universally added to a person's name; -san can be used in formal and informal contexts, regardless of the person's gender. [2] It is also commonly used to convert common nouns into proper ones, as discussed below. San may be used in combination with workplace nouns, so a bookseller might be addressed or referred to as hon'ya-san ("bookstore" + san) and a butcher as nikuya-san ("butcher's shop" + san). San is sometimes used with company names.