Cat meme, too much rizz: These are Japanâs nominations for buzzword of the year
Results will be declared on 2 December
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Your support makes all the difference.Nominations for Japanâs buzzword of the year were released on Tuesday, revealing the trends and conversations that dominated the country in 2024.
The buzzword for 2024, along with the words that made it to the top 10, will be chosen from among 30 nominated words and will be revealed on 2 December at the U-Can Shingo Ryukogo Taisho competition organised by the publishing house Jiyukokuminsha, The Japan Times reported.
The 2024 Paris Olympics appears to have been a big draw as several top words centre around the event. âBureikinâ or âbreakingâ refers to breakdancing, which was included in the Olympics for the first time this year. Japanâs Ami Yuasa became the first woman to bring home an Olympic gold for breaking.
The competition also saw controversy after Australian breaker Rachael âRaygunâ Gunnâs performance led to viewers questioning her moves and her costume, followed by vicious bullying on social media.
Javelin thrower Haruka Kitaguchiâs frustrated statement, âMeigen ga nokosenakattaâ or âI couldâve said something more quotableâ after she won a gold at the Olympics too made it to the list, as did wheelchair tennis player Tokito Odaâs âYabai, kakkoyosugiru, oreâ or âWhoa, I have too much rizzâ after he won a Paralympic gold in menâs wheelchair tennis.
Japanâs equestrian team, who brought back the countryâs first medal in the sport since 1932, called themselves âShoro Japanâ or âpast middle-aged Japanâ because of the teamâs average age of 41.5.
Japanese baseball pitcher Shohei Ohtaniâs historic achievement of becoming the first player ever to hit 50 home runs and steal 50 bases in a single season led to the inclusion of â50:50â in the list.
Political events dominated the national conversation.
After the revelation that the ruling Liberal Democratic Partyâs campaign funds had been siphoned off into a secret slush fund led to the resignation of its leader Fumio Kishida, âuragane mondaiâ or âslush fund scandalâ saw consistent use, especially as Japan went to polls later in the year.
âKasuharaâ or âcustomer harassmentâ too was a top mention after the Tokyo metropolitan assembly passed an ordinance to protect service workers.
âShin shiheiâ or ânew banknotesâ â Japan introduced new banknotes on 3 July â and âShin NISAâ, an abbreviation of the Nippon Individual Savings Account, a tax-exempt investment programme launched on 1 January 2024 to encourage people to shift from savings towards investment, were also in the list.
Words that became popular on social media also made it to the list, like âNeko Memeâ or âcat memeâ, âBeRealâ; a French social networking app that asks users to post unfiltered photos of themselves; and âKaiwaiâ or âneighbourhoodâ, which refers to groups with a common interest.
âKonbini Fujisanâ or âMount Fuji convenience storeâ too was a heavily mentioned phrase, after frustrated locals in Fujikawaguchiko bemoaned the hordes of badly behaved tourists that flocked to the popular Instagram photo spot in front of a Lawsonâs convenience store.
Food-related words were also nominated, such as âAsai Bouruâ after açaà bowls saw a comeback in Japan as well as âInbaundonâ, a portmanteau of the words inbaundo or inbound and don or rice bowl, which is a fine-dining version of the popular Japanese recipe with expensive seafood.
âReiwa no kome sÅdÅâ or the ârice riots in the Reiwa Eraâ donât refer to actual riots, but the shortage of rice in supermarkets the country saw this summer.
Other phrases like âTokuryÅ«â or âquasi gangstersâ for makeshift groups set up to commit crimes and âHowaito Ankenâ or âwhite job,â a euphemism for illegal part-time jobs were also on the list, according to Tokyo Weekender.
Also featured were âHidankyoâ after the âNihon Hidankyoâ, a group representing survivors of the Hiroshima-Nagasaki atomic bombings who won the Nobel Peace Prize for 2024, as well as âNankai Torafu Jishin Rinji Johoâ after the Japan Meteorological Agencyâs first ever megaquake alert following a 7.1 magnitude earthquake off the coast of Miyazaki Prefecture in August.
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