释义 |
Definition of shonen in English: shonen(also shounen) noun ˈʃəʊnənˈSHōnən mass nounA genre of Japanese comics and animated films aimed primarily at a young male audience, typically characterized by action-filled plots. as modifier manga artists use the eyes to indicate emotions and sensitivity, not a high priority in early shonen manga Example sentencesExamples - Boys' comics (shonen manga) and men's comics (seinen manga) contain a lot of elements that appeal to their target audience.
- 1952: Astro Boy gets his own solo series in the Manga Shonen anthology, which runs for an amazing 18 years as Japan's most popular comic strip.
- Some of the 22-year-old's favorite Japanese comic titles are those aimed at male readers, or shonen manga.
- The story revolves around his teen years as a wannabe yankee sent to public school after being inspired into delinquency by the shonen manga, "Be-Bop High School" in the early 80s.
- It has been able to carve a niche, largely because it specializes specifically in shonen publications, aimed specifically at boys.
- It represents a nice turning point in the series, easing out from its inaugural season into one of the finer shonen anime series in recent memory.
- It seems a fitting enough place for the program to start considering the cartoons' roots in shonen, or stories mostly intended for adolescent boys.
- Viz had been planning for some time to do a mainstream shonen manga magazine.
- It is based on a manga originally serialized in the Weekly Shonen Magazine (available in the US in serialized book form).
- This one is a shonen.
- Titles are created for children (kodomo manga), for tween and teen girls (shojo manga), for tween and teen boys (shonen manga), for women (josei manga), and for men (seinen manga).
- In Japan's top-selling shonen (boys' weeklies), even the most populist and mainstream serials will happily acknowledge these sources.
Origin 1980s: from Japanese shōnen 'boy'. Compare with shojo. Definition of shonen in US English: shonen(also shounen) nounˈSHōnən A genre of Japanese comics and animated films aimed primarily at a young male audience, typically characterized by action-filled plots. as modifier manga artists use the eyes to indicate emotions and sensitivity, not a high priority in early shonen manga Example sentencesExamples - Some of the 22-year-old's favorite Japanese comic titles are those aimed at male readers, or shonen manga.
- In Japan's top-selling shonen (boys' weeklies), even the most populist and mainstream serials will happily acknowledge these sources.
- Boys' comics (shonen manga) and men's comics (seinen manga) contain a lot of elements that appeal to their target audience.
- It has been able to carve a niche, largely because it specializes specifically in shonen publications, aimed specifically at boys.
- Titles are created for children (kodomo manga), for tween and teen girls (shojo manga), for tween and teen boys (shonen manga), for women (josei manga), and for men (seinen manga).
- Viz had been planning for some time to do a mainstream shonen manga magazine.
- This one is a shonen.
- It represents a nice turning point in the series, easing out from its inaugural season into one of the finer shonen anime series in recent memory.
- The story revolves around his teen years as a wannabe yankee sent to public school after being inspired into delinquency by the shonen manga, "Be-Bop High School" in the early 80s.
- It is based on a manga originally serialized in the Weekly Shonen Magazine (available in the US in serialized book form).
- 1952: Astro Boy gets his own solo series in the Manga Shonen anthology, which runs for an amazing 18 years as Japan's most popular comic strip.
- It seems a fitting enough place for the program to start considering the cartoons' roots in shonen, or stories mostly intended for adolescent boys.
Origin 1980s: from Japanese shōnen ‘boy’. Compare with shojo. |