What is the difference between 「名前【なまえ】」 and 「名称【めいしょう】」?名前 -...
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What is the difference between 「名前【なまえ】」 and 「名称【めいしょう】」?
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I am learning the word 「名称【めいしょう】」. According to the dictionary, it means "name", but so does 「名前【なまえ】」. What are the differences in terms of meaning and usage between both words?
I noticed that the entry for 「名称【めいしょう】」 states that it can mean "title", yet I can't figure out how to use the word properly.
よろしくお願いします!
word-choice synonyms wago-and-kango
add a comment |
I am learning the word 「名称【めいしょう】」. According to the dictionary, it means "name", but so does 「名前【なまえ】」. What are the differences in terms of meaning and usage between both words?
I noticed that the entry for 「名称【めいしょう】」 states that it can mean "title", yet I can't figure out how to use the word properly.
よろしくお願いします!
word-choice synonyms wago-and-kango
1
related japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/24410/…
– JACK
8 hours ago
1
I always find jisho.org to be very helpful in finding words and also sentences where the words are used.
– JACK
7 hours ago
2
@JACK just a word of caution, but sentences from Jisho are not necessarily written by, or checked by, native speakers. They come from a third party website that anyone can contribute to.
– Leebo
4 hours ago
@Leebo I agree and assume its the same with all sites.
– JACK
3 hours ago
1
@JACK there are plenty of resources with content written by natives. For instance the Balanced Corpus of Contemporary Written Japanese. That's a curated database, so it can't be contributed to by random internet users.
– Leebo
3 hours ago
add a comment |
I am learning the word 「名称【めいしょう】」. According to the dictionary, it means "name", but so does 「名前【なまえ】」. What are the differences in terms of meaning and usage between both words?
I noticed that the entry for 「名称【めいしょう】」 states that it can mean "title", yet I can't figure out how to use the word properly.
よろしくお願いします!
word-choice synonyms wago-and-kango
I am learning the word 「名称【めいしょう】」. According to the dictionary, it means "name", but so does 「名前【なまえ】」. What are the differences in terms of meaning and usage between both words?
I noticed that the entry for 「名称【めいしょう】」 states that it can mean "title", yet I can't figure out how to use the word properly.
よろしくお願いします!
word-choice synonyms wago-and-kango
word-choice synonyms wago-and-kango
edited 44 mins ago
naruto
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183k9 gold badges185 silver badges354 bronze badges
asked 9 hours ago
jarmanso7jarmanso7
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1
related japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/24410/…
– JACK
8 hours ago
1
I always find jisho.org to be very helpful in finding words and also sentences where the words are used.
– JACK
7 hours ago
2
@JACK just a word of caution, but sentences from Jisho are not necessarily written by, or checked by, native speakers. They come from a third party website that anyone can contribute to.
– Leebo
4 hours ago
@Leebo I agree and assume its the same with all sites.
– JACK
3 hours ago
1
@JACK there are plenty of resources with content written by natives. For instance the Balanced Corpus of Contemporary Written Japanese. That's a curated database, so it can't be contributed to by random internet users.
– Leebo
3 hours ago
add a comment |
1
related japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/24410/…
– JACK
8 hours ago
1
I always find jisho.org to be very helpful in finding words and also sentences where the words are used.
– JACK
7 hours ago
2
@JACK just a word of caution, but sentences from Jisho are not necessarily written by, or checked by, native speakers. They come from a third party website that anyone can contribute to.
– Leebo
4 hours ago
@Leebo I agree and assume its the same with all sites.
– JACK
3 hours ago
1
@JACK there are plenty of resources with content written by natives. For instance the Balanced Corpus of Contemporary Written Japanese. That's a curated database, so it can't be contributed to by random internet users.
– Leebo
3 hours ago
1
1
related japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/24410/…
– JACK
8 hours ago
related japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/24410/…
– JACK
8 hours ago
1
1
I always find jisho.org to be very helpful in finding words and also sentences where the words are used.
– JACK
7 hours ago
I always find jisho.org to be very helpful in finding words and also sentences where the words are used.
– JACK
7 hours ago
2
2
@JACK just a word of caution, but sentences from Jisho are not necessarily written by, or checked by, native speakers. They come from a third party website that anyone can contribute to.
– Leebo
4 hours ago
@JACK just a word of caution, but sentences from Jisho are not necessarily written by, or checked by, native speakers. They come from a third party website that anyone can contribute to.
– Leebo
4 hours ago
@Leebo I agree and assume its the same with all sites.
– JACK
3 hours ago
@Leebo I agree and assume its the same with all sites.
– JACK
3 hours ago
1
1
@JACK there are plenty of resources with content written by natives. For instance the Balanced Corpus of Contemporary Written Japanese. That's a curated database, so it can't be contributed to by random internet users.
– Leebo
3 hours ago
@JACK there are plenty of resources with content written by natives. For instance the Balanced Corpus of Contemporary Written Japanese. That's a curated database, so it can't be contributed to by random internet users.
– Leebo
3 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
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The differences come from the fact that:
「名前{なまえ}」 is an originally Japanese word while
「名称{めいしょう}」 is a Sino-loanword.
Formality:
For the reason above, 「名称」 is more formal, academic and technical than 「名前」. Think about "chat" vs "conversation", "deep" vs. "profound", etc. in English. In both Japanese and English, the big words have mostly come from "somewhere else".
Meanings:
「名称」 means the name of a thing or organization -- almost anything, really. The only thing it does not mean is a personal name.
「名前」 can mean any kind of name including personal names.
For the particular meaning of "personal name", we use 「氏名{しめい}」 to sound more formal. We never use 「名称」 for that purpose.
add a comment |
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active
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The differences come from the fact that:
「名前{なまえ}」 is an originally Japanese word while
「名称{めいしょう}」 is a Sino-loanword.
Formality:
For the reason above, 「名称」 is more formal, academic and technical than 「名前」. Think about "chat" vs "conversation", "deep" vs. "profound", etc. in English. In both Japanese and English, the big words have mostly come from "somewhere else".
Meanings:
「名称」 means the name of a thing or organization -- almost anything, really. The only thing it does not mean is a personal name.
「名前」 can mean any kind of name including personal names.
For the particular meaning of "personal name", we use 「氏名{しめい}」 to sound more formal. We never use 「名称」 for that purpose.
add a comment |
The differences come from the fact that:
「名前{なまえ}」 is an originally Japanese word while
「名称{めいしょう}」 is a Sino-loanword.
Formality:
For the reason above, 「名称」 is more formal, academic and technical than 「名前」. Think about "chat" vs "conversation", "deep" vs. "profound", etc. in English. In both Japanese and English, the big words have mostly come from "somewhere else".
Meanings:
「名称」 means the name of a thing or organization -- almost anything, really. The only thing it does not mean is a personal name.
「名前」 can mean any kind of name including personal names.
For the particular meaning of "personal name", we use 「氏名{しめい}」 to sound more formal. We never use 「名称」 for that purpose.
add a comment |
The differences come from the fact that:
「名前{なまえ}」 is an originally Japanese word while
「名称{めいしょう}」 is a Sino-loanword.
Formality:
For the reason above, 「名称」 is more formal, academic and technical than 「名前」. Think about "chat" vs "conversation", "deep" vs. "profound", etc. in English. In both Japanese and English, the big words have mostly come from "somewhere else".
Meanings:
「名称」 means the name of a thing or organization -- almost anything, really. The only thing it does not mean is a personal name.
「名前」 can mean any kind of name including personal names.
For the particular meaning of "personal name", we use 「氏名{しめい}」 to sound more formal. We never use 「名称」 for that purpose.
The differences come from the fact that:
「名前{なまえ}」 is an originally Japanese word while
「名称{めいしょう}」 is a Sino-loanword.
Formality:
For the reason above, 「名称」 is more formal, academic and technical than 「名前」. Think about "chat" vs "conversation", "deep" vs. "profound", etc. in English. In both Japanese and English, the big words have mostly come from "somewhere else".
Meanings:
「名称」 means the name of a thing or organization -- almost anything, really. The only thing it does not mean is a personal name.
「名前」 can mean any kind of name including personal names.
For the particular meaning of "personal name", we use 「氏名{しめい}」 to sound more formal. We never use 「名称」 for that purpose.
answered 3 hours ago
l'électeurl'électeur
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1
related japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/24410/…
– JACK
8 hours ago
1
I always find jisho.org to be very helpful in finding words and also sentences where the words are used.
– JACK
7 hours ago
2
@JACK just a word of caution, but sentences from Jisho are not necessarily written by, or checked by, native speakers. They come from a third party website that anyone can contribute to.
– Leebo
4 hours ago
@Leebo I agree and assume its the same with all sites.
– JACK
3 hours ago
1
@JACK there are plenty of resources with content written by natives. For instance the Balanced Corpus of Contemporary Written Japanese. That's a curated database, so it can't be contributed to by random internet users.
– Leebo
3 hours ago