Alternative forms
edit
Etymology
edit
Borrowed from Japanese ジェイポップ (jeipoppu), from J- + pop, an abbreviation of Japanese pop, coined by Tokyo radio station J‑WAVE in 1988.
J-pop (uncountable)
- Japanese pop music influenced by western genres.
2005 August 21, Chris Campion, “J-Pop's dream factory”, in The Observer[1], →ISSN:The girls are constantly reshuffled into new permutations in order to feed the J-pop market's insatiable demand for fresh looks and faces.
2010 March 25, Teresa Nieman, “Why Japanese pop matters”, in The Guardian[2], →ISSN:She may be declining in popularity, relevance and quality, but Ayumi Hamasaki is still the undisputed Queen of J-Pop, and it will be a long while before anyone can surpass her.
Translations
edit
Japanese pop music
- Arabic: جِاي-بُوب m (jey-būb), جِاي-بُوب m (jey-pop)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 日本流行音樂/日本流行音乐 (Rìběn liúxíng yīnyuè)
- Finnish: J-pop, japsipoppi, japanilainen pop
- French: J-pop (fr) f, pop japonaise f
- German: J-Pop m
- Indonesian: J-pop (id)
- Japanese: J-POP (jei-poppu), ジェーポップ (jēpoppu), Jポップ (jē-poppu)
- Korean: J-pop (jei-pap), 일본의 팝음악 (Ilbon-ui pap-eumak), 제이팝 (ko) (jei-pap)
- Marathi: जे-पॉप n (je-pŏp)
- Portuguese: J-pop (pt) m
- Russian: джей-по́п m (džej-póp), япо́нский поп m (japónskij pop), япо́нская поп-му́зыка f (japónskaja pop-múzyka)
- Spanish: J-Pop m
- Thai: เจ-ป็อป (jay-bpòp)
- Vietnamese: J-Pop
|
See also
edit
Portuguese
edit
Pronunciation
edit
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˌd͡ʒejˈpɔ.pi/ [ˌd͡ʒeɪ̯ˈpɔ.pi], /ˌd͡ʒejˈpɔp/ [ˌd͡ʒeɪ̯ˈpɔp]
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˌd͡ʒejˈpɔ.pi/ [ˌd͡ʒeɪ̯ˈpɔ.pi], /ˌd͡ʒejˈpɔp/ [ˌd͡ʒeɪ̯ˈpɔp]
- (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /ˌd͡ʒejˈpɔp/ [ˌd͡ʒeɪ̯ˈpɔp], /ˌd͡ʒejˈpɔ.pi/ [ˌd͡ʒeɪ̯ˈpɔ.pi]
J-pop m (uncountable)
- (music) J-pop (Japanese pop music)