Saturday, February 19, 2011

▼Japanese Gyaru 日本のギャル▼【NINJA CHIKUWA NEWS FROM JAPAN】《竹輪》





Gyaru is a Japanese transliteration of the English word gal, that of girl being gaaru .Gyaru subculture is still a large influence in Japan's fashion economy with Gal brands branching out and becoming more accessible in rural areas. In Tokyo, more often than not, a shopping center at each main train station dedicated to offering the newest and trendiest items from popular Gal brands. Some brands are also reaching overseas by having their items easily accessible in webshops offering world-wide shipping services.

ギャル(英語:gal)は、若い女性を意味するガール(girl)が訛った語で、日本では、活発な若い女性やピチピチした若い女性、今時の女性を意味する語。

■■■Varieties of gyaru in Japan■■■

Ganguro gyaru (ガングロギャル): a gal with an artificial deep tan and bleached hair. This style was popular in the late 1990s and early 2000, and while that is no longer the case, there are still quite a few people who wear this fashion.

Kogyaru: generally a high school student (高校生 kōkōsei).




Oyajigyaru (オヤジギャル): from oyaji and gyaru. A gyaru who behaves in a masculine way, who drinks beer and uses rough language.

Oneegyaru (お姉ギャル): a gyaru who has graduated from high school, and thus become a more mature onee-san (literally "elder sister" but, here, "young lady"). The style is more sophisticated.

Ogyaru (汚ギャル): a dirty or disheveled gyaru who may forsake daily baths or takes little care in her behaviour and dress, even by gyaru standards.

Manba (マンバ): deep tan and contrasting white make-up. Their hair is usually pastel-coloured or blonde, and very long and back-combed. Their clothes are neon and layered.

Bibinba (ビビンバ): this look usually includes a lot of gold and jewellery. Similar to b-gal.

Banba (バンバ): Can also be seen as a lighter, brighter form of manba, though they are distinct styles. Banba wear less of the white makeup than manba and wear brighter clothes. Club wear is popular. They also use more glitter, and have a neon touch to their hair. They use more extreme-looking types of false eyelashes and coloured contact lenses. The most respected Gal-cir is Angeleek; there are 22 members in their Tokyo group, and they have many other groups throughout the country.

Himegyaru (姫ギャル): girls who dress as princesses. Hair colours vary from blonde to black and is usually very big and teased. They wear expensive clothing from brands such as Liz Lisa and Jesus Diamante.

Gyaruo (which can be written as ギャル男 in Japanese) are a sub-group of modern Japanese youth culture. They are the male equivalent of the gyaru. The o suffix that is added to the word, is one reading of the Kanji for male (男).

Gal Sone (ギャル曽根, Gyaru Sone?, born Natsuko Sone (曽根 菜津子, Sone Natsuko?) on December 4, 1985, in Maizuru, Kyoto) is a female Japanese competitive eater and singer. Her popularity has helped produce a resurgence in Japanese competitive eating or ōgui after the outcry following the death of a Japanese schoolboy imitating an eating stunt in 2002 resulted in a three year hiatus for major Japanese eating contests.

Fundoshi (ふんどし) is the traditional Japanese undergarment for adult males, made from a length of cotton.Fundoshi Gyaru(ふんどしギャル)


Kunoichi (くノ一) is the term for a female ninja or practitioner of ninjutsu 忍術(ninpo忍法).
Kunoichi Gyaru (忍者ギャル)




Please know NINJA culture still more through ≪NINJA LETTER≫.
The letter listed「The Code」,「The Discipline」and「The Charm」
written by Japanese NINJA and includes 「The Certificate of「NINJA DUTY」.
If you received NINJA LETTER from Japan, you had to inherit NINJA DUTY.

【 Via 】 ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓
ninja-letter-chikuwa.com
ninja-letter-chikuwa.com/icon.html


【 Link 】 ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓
http://the-official-ninja-duty.blog


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