コギャル
Japanese
Etymology
First appeared in the early 1990s, especially after the term’s popularisation in the 1993 Late-Night TV Special “Za kogyaru naito” (The Kogal Night), though other theories regarding the term's derivation exist.[1]
A likely derivation is attributed to teenage girls dressing as ボディコン (Bodikon women) at discothéques in the early 1990s, therefore being a slang abbreviation to indicate the many young women who was underage in these discos.
- From 高校生 (kōkōsei, “high-school student”) + ギャル (gyaru, “gal, young woman”, originally referring to someone not a minor).
- From 格好 (kakkō, “appearance, seeming”) + ギャル (gyaru).
Another possible derivation is attributed to the mass media.
The gyaru portion in all of these is a borrowing from English gal.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ko̞ɡʲa̠ɾɯ̟ᵝ]
Noun
コギャル • (kogyaru)
- a teenage girl participating in the Kogal subculture in Japan, which is a form of the ギャル (Gyaru) fashion subculture and peaked in the mid-1990s. Kogals were troped by the Japanese media as having tendencies towards being obsessively trend-conscious.
References
- p. 18, "GIRL'S CULTURE-ギャルが日本を救う!?-" ("Girl's Culture - Gals Rescue Japan!?-", in Japanese), Zenta Nishida, editor; BRUTUS, 1 May 2009; Magazine House, Ltd.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.