dandere

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Japanese ダンデレ (dandere), a portmanteau of 黙り (danmari, keeping completely silent), emphatic noun form of verb 黙る (damaru, to be silent), and デレデレ (dere-dere, in a lovey-dovey, infatuated, or lovestruck manner, adverb).[1]

Noun

dandere (plural dandere or danderes)

  1. (chiefly Japanese fiction) A character archetype who stays silent, not expressing their feelings.
    • 2017, Luca Paolo Bruno, "Grand Narratives Blossom still: Character database and political narratives in the Muv Luv franchise", thesis submitted to Ca' Foscari University of Venice, page 13:
      A tsundere-type character will engender a hostile on the outside but sweet on the inside reaction towards the player, while a dandere will show little to know emotion except for subtle displays of affection.
    • 2019, Samneang Peo, "Visual Development Of A Visual Novel: Visual Storytelling in an Interactive Game", thesis submitted to South-Eastern Finland University of Applied Sciences, page 12:
      The kuudere and dandere characters have more reserved personalities, hence those qualities are also reflected in their designs.
    • 2022 March, Christopher B. Patterson, “Making Queer Asiatic Worlds: Performance and Racial Interaction in North American Visual Novels”, in American Literature, volume 94, number 1:
      Then there is Yuri, the blue oni to Natsuki’s red oni, who is shy, cute, and literary but hides a maddening love for the player; she is the archetypical dandere character thought to emerge from the blue-haired Rei Ayanami of the anime Neon Genesis Evangelion []
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:dandere.

References

  1. “Tsundere, Yandere, Kuudere, Dandere - Meaning”, in Japanese with Anime, 2016 July 21, Dandere ダンデレ

Anagrams

Danish

Etymology

From French dandiner.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [dɑŋˈdeˀʌ]

Verb

dandere (imperative dander, infinitive at dandere, present tense danderer, past tense danderede, perfect tense danderet)

  1. to dander (wander about)

Conjugation

References

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