kuudere
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Japanese クーデレ (kūdere), a portmanteau of クール (kūru, “calm”), from English cool, and デレデレ (dere-dere, “in a lovey-dovey, infatuated, or lovestruck manner”, adverb).[1]
Noun
kuudere (plural kuudere or kuuderes)
- (chiefly Japanese fiction) A calm, aloof, reserved fictional character (usually a girl) who has a hidden soft side, especially for a love interest.
- 2018, Ichiro Sakaki, translated by Kevin Steinbach, Outbreak Company, volume 5, unnumbered page:
- True, she wasn't very expressive—or anyway, I didn't feel like I saw a lot of emotion from her—but if I thought of her as a kuudere, or one of those “weird girl” types, that could actually be seen as a positive.
- 2018, "Moogle", "Cool As Rain", Otakuzine Anime Magazine, Issue #121, page 40:
- The cool and tough exterior she displays makes for a good kuudere, and the blue eyes and silver hair already sets her up for the role in the Clannad series.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:kuudere.
References
- “Tsundere, Yandere, Kuudere, Dandere - Meaning”, in Japanese with Anime, 2016 July 21, Kuudere クーデレ
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