Is honorific speech ever used in the first person? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Humble language for other people as an insultFor verbs with irregular humble/honorific forms, are the regular forms still used?Why is the honorific o used for the bathroom?Verbs which are more frequently used to built the honorific passive formsThe usage of 様さま (-sama) honorificCan the honorific お be used with a person's name?The humble (謙譲語) prefix 愚 when used to refer to own family membersIs the honorific postfix -氏し usually used towards men?Can the honorific o be used in front of all nouns?Formal, feminine first-person pronounIs the お used at the start of the sentence a honorific お?

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Is honorific speech ever used in the first person?

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Is honorific speech ever used in the first person?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Humble language for other people as an insultFor verbs with irregular humble/honorific forms, are the regular forms still used?Why is the honorific o used for the bathroom?Verbs which are more frequently used to built the honorific passive formsThe usage of 様さま (-sama) honorificCan the honorific お be used with a person's name?The humble (謙譲語) prefix 愚 when used to refer to own family membersIs the honorific postfix -氏し usually used towards men?Can the honorific o be used in front of all nouns?Formal, feminine first-person pronounIs the お used at the start of the sentence a honorific お?










2















I'm just starting out learning Japanese, and I've read that when using honorific and humble forms and conjugations, you use humble forms to refer to yourself, and honorific forms to refer to others, such as the person you're talking to.



Is there any context in which a person might refer to themselves using honorific speech? A CEO, the Queen of England or Emperor Akihito, some fictional villain who thinks they're a God, someone trying to be insulting?










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  • I've never heard it, even from characters in fiction who would refer to themselves as 俺様おれさま・私様わたくしさま.

    – Aeon Akechi
    2 hours ago
















2















I'm just starting out learning Japanese, and I've read that when using honorific and humble forms and conjugations, you use humble forms to refer to yourself, and honorific forms to refer to others, such as the person you're talking to.



Is there any context in which a person might refer to themselves using honorific speech? A CEO, the Queen of England or Emperor Akihito, some fictional villain who thinks they're a God, someone trying to be insulting?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Obie 2.0 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • I've never heard it, even from characters in fiction who would refer to themselves as 俺様おれさま・私様わたくしさま.

    – Aeon Akechi
    2 hours ago














2












2








2








I'm just starting out learning Japanese, and I've read that when using honorific and humble forms and conjugations, you use humble forms to refer to yourself, and honorific forms to refer to others, such as the person you're talking to.



Is there any context in which a person might refer to themselves using honorific speech? A CEO, the Queen of England or Emperor Akihito, some fictional villain who thinks they're a God, someone trying to be insulting?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Obie 2.0 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I'm just starting out learning Japanese, and I've read that when using honorific and humble forms and conjugations, you use humble forms to refer to yourself, and honorific forms to refer to others, such as the person you're talking to.



Is there any context in which a person might refer to themselves using honorific speech? A CEO, the Queen of England or Emperor Akihito, some fictional villain who thinks they're a God, someone trying to be insulting?







politeness honorifics formality






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Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







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asked 6 hours ago









Obie 2.0Obie 2.0

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Obie 2.0 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • I've never heard it, even from characters in fiction who would refer to themselves as 俺様おれさま・私様わたくしさま.

    – Aeon Akechi
    2 hours ago


















  • I've never heard it, even from characters in fiction who would refer to themselves as 俺様おれさま・私様わたくしさま.

    – Aeon Akechi
    2 hours ago

















I've never heard it, even from characters in fiction who would refer to themselves as 俺様おれさま・私様わたくしさま.

– Aeon Akechi
2 hours ago






I've never heard it, even from characters in fiction who would refer to themselves as 俺様おれさま・私様わたくしさま.

– Aeon Akechi
2 hours ago











1 Answer
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3














In ancient Japanese, honorific verbs was used by very noble people to refer to their own actions (自尊敬語, "self-honorifics"). But you won't see this unless you learn archaic Japanese seriously. In modern Japanese, even Prime Minister and Emperor use humble verbs properly to refer to their own actions.



You may see a high person use humble verbs to refer to someone else's actions. A typical example is 参れ ("Come!") said by a governor in historical samurai dramas. Beginners can forget this for now, but this is something an advanced learner may encounter. See: Humble language for other people as an insult



In addition, you may see someone use honorific name suffix to refer to themselves. 俺様 is a typical "arrogant" first-person pronoun. In fiction, you may even see a stereotyped arrogant girl called エリカ call herself エリカ様 ("Miss Erika"), for example. This is a stereotyped arrogant speech, and real noble people never speak like this.






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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
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    active

    oldest

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    In ancient Japanese, honorific verbs was used by very noble people to refer to their own actions (自尊敬語, "self-honorifics"). But you won't see this unless you learn archaic Japanese seriously. In modern Japanese, even Prime Minister and Emperor use humble verbs properly to refer to their own actions.



    You may see a high person use humble verbs to refer to someone else's actions. A typical example is 参れ ("Come!") said by a governor in historical samurai dramas. Beginners can forget this for now, but this is something an advanced learner may encounter. See: Humble language for other people as an insult



    In addition, you may see someone use honorific name suffix to refer to themselves. 俺様 is a typical "arrogant" first-person pronoun. In fiction, you may even see a stereotyped arrogant girl called エリカ call herself エリカ様 ("Miss Erika"), for example. This is a stereotyped arrogant speech, and real noble people never speak like this.






    share|improve this answer



























      3














      In ancient Japanese, honorific verbs was used by very noble people to refer to their own actions (自尊敬語, "self-honorifics"). But you won't see this unless you learn archaic Japanese seriously. In modern Japanese, even Prime Minister and Emperor use humble verbs properly to refer to their own actions.



      You may see a high person use humble verbs to refer to someone else's actions. A typical example is 参れ ("Come!") said by a governor in historical samurai dramas. Beginners can forget this for now, but this is something an advanced learner may encounter. See: Humble language for other people as an insult



      In addition, you may see someone use honorific name suffix to refer to themselves. 俺様 is a typical "arrogant" first-person pronoun. In fiction, you may even see a stereotyped arrogant girl called エリカ call herself エリカ様 ("Miss Erika"), for example. This is a stereotyped arrogant speech, and real noble people never speak like this.






      share|improve this answer

























        3












        3








        3







        In ancient Japanese, honorific verbs was used by very noble people to refer to their own actions (自尊敬語, "self-honorifics"). But you won't see this unless you learn archaic Japanese seriously. In modern Japanese, even Prime Minister and Emperor use humble verbs properly to refer to their own actions.



        You may see a high person use humble verbs to refer to someone else's actions. A typical example is 参れ ("Come!") said by a governor in historical samurai dramas. Beginners can forget this for now, but this is something an advanced learner may encounter. See: Humble language for other people as an insult



        In addition, you may see someone use honorific name suffix to refer to themselves. 俺様 is a typical "arrogant" first-person pronoun. In fiction, you may even see a stereotyped arrogant girl called エリカ call herself エリカ様 ("Miss Erika"), for example. This is a stereotyped arrogant speech, and real noble people never speak like this.






        share|improve this answer













        In ancient Japanese, honorific verbs was used by very noble people to refer to their own actions (自尊敬語, "self-honorifics"). But you won't see this unless you learn archaic Japanese seriously. In modern Japanese, even Prime Minister and Emperor use humble verbs properly to refer to their own actions.



        You may see a high person use humble verbs to refer to someone else's actions. A typical example is 参れ ("Come!") said by a governor in historical samurai dramas. Beginners can forget this for now, but this is something an advanced learner may encounter. See: Humble language for other people as an insult



        In addition, you may see someone use honorific name suffix to refer to themselves. 俺様 is a typical "arrogant" first-person pronoun. In fiction, you may even see a stereotyped arrogant girl called エリカ call herself エリカ様 ("Miss Erika"), for example. This is a stereotyped arrogant speech, and real noble people never speak like this.







        share|improve this answer












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        answered 36 mins ago









        narutonaruto

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