#JIMIN氏
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o703 · 2 years ago
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アホな写真。バンタンのJIMIN氏【写真右】が東京のCoCo壱番屋さんで取った写真です。同じ様に地元のCoCo壱番屋さんにいって、同じような写真とって喜んでるDQNです。
JIMIN氏のお席は③時間待ち。
わたしのお席は待ちなくてもても座れますよꉂ🤭
知らぬ間にエビカツがなくなってて寂しすぎる。
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chosunajp · 11 days ago
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beehunni62 · 3 years ago
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Rare Portraits Depicting Hanfu Worn with Right Over Left Lapel Closing (左衽).
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Thirteenth Ancestor Portrait from Portrait Album of Wu’s Ancestors 吳氏先祖容像十三. Ni Renji. Painted sometime between the late Ming Dynasty and early Qing Dynasty during the artist’s life (1607-1685). Yiwu Museum, Zhejiang, China [image source].
For the Han, the left lapel was considered Yang and the right one Yin and, thus, living people placed the left lapel over the right one to symbolize Yang (life) covering Yin (death). That’s why only dead people had their right lapel over their left. In the case of the dead, Yin (death; right lapel) overtook Yang (life; left lapel). Moreover, the left over right lapel (右衽) served as an ethnic distinction for the Han.
However, not all living Han people followed this tradition and there are documented cases of them wearing their hanfu with the right lapel over the left one.
There are exceptions in which living Han Chinese would wear clothing with a zuoren closure. For example, in some areas (such as Northern Hebei) in the 10th century, some ethnic Han Chinese could be found wearing left-lapel clothing. It was also common for the Han Chinese women to adopt left lapel under the reign of foreign nationalities, such as in the such as in the Yuan dynasty. The practice of wearing the zuoren also continued in some areas of the Ming dynasty despite being a Han Chinese-ruled dynasty which is an atypical feature.
Wikipedia, Garment collars in Hanfu
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Fifth Ancestor Portrait from Portrait Album of Wu’s Ancestors 吳氏先祖容像五. Ni Renji. Painted sometime between the late Ming Dynasty and early Qing Dynasty during the artist’s life (1607-1685). Yiwu Museum, Zhejiang, China [image source].
Other non-Han ethnicities, such as the Khitans and Xianbei, would preserve their 左衽 tradition even after adopting hanfu. It’s possible for these women (and its mostly women wearing hanfu depicted with 左衽) to be non-Han in origin or are Han but came from areas where 左衽 was still practiced due to non-Han ethnic influence. I remember reading somewhere that, South of the Yangtze, certain Han women wore their hanfu in both styles.
Since almost all of the portraits below are ancestor portraits and there are plenty of those where the women and men wear 右衽 despite being dead at the time of painting, it’s unlikely that the 左衽 depicted is meant to indicate that the woman is dead.
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Portrait of the wife of a dignitary with maid by Chow Ying. Scroll. Painting on silk. 16th century. Moscow State Museum of Oriental Art [image source].
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Portrait of Father Zhang Jimin and Mother Zhao. Unknown artist. Ming or Qing dynasty, Late Ming or early Qing dynasty (17th century or later). Hanging scroll. Ink and colors on silk. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery. National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution [image source].
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Ancestor Portrait of a Court Lady. Possibly Ming Dynasty. Unknown artist. Hanging scroll (laid down on panel), ink and color on silk. The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art [image source].
Notice how, even the maid in the background above, has 左衽.
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Possible Portrait of Ancestor with maid. Unknown Artist. Possibly Ming Dynasty [image source].
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Ancestor Portrait. Unknown artist. Late 19th century. Qing Dynasty. Auguttes Auction House. [image source].
Note: Be careful when dating ancestor portraits. Many were painted posthumously and could depict ancestors from multiple previous generations. Just because the figures are seen wearing a dynasty’s distinctive clothing, does not necessarily mean that it was painted then. Some Qing Dynasty ancestor portraits depict ancestors from the Ming Dynasty and, thus, artists painted the figures with Ming clothing.
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Images portraying hanfu in the Ming Dynasty with 左衽 drawn by Sesshu Toyo (1420 - 1506 CE), a Japanese monk who visited China between 1467 to 1469. Ink on paper [image source].
More portraits with 左衽 and modern recreation:
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vantefleurs · 5 years ago
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࣪.𓏲 ♥︎ namjoon + jimin bios! ✦ഒ
ㅤㅤ ㅤ𝗷𝗺 ♥︎ 𝗸𝗻𝗷 ੭⸼ 광 ៸៸ 산 ⍝ : 𝖫𝖮𝖵𝖤 ! 🌾
ㅤㅤㅤ ㅤ⌗ 彼氏 𓂅 ❒ : 𝗺𝗶𝗻𝗶﹠𝗺𝗼𝗻𝗶.
ㅤㅤㅤ𓏲 ✦ 미니 · 모니 ﹅ ⿻ : 𝗺𝘆 𝗮𝗻𝗴𝖾𝗅𝗌 ! 🍓
‹3 : like or reblog if you save/use. ♥︎
ㅤㅤㅤㅤ
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bluewinnertree · 4 years ago
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この背中守りたい🫂ジミン氏ーーー\(//∇//)\#jimin #bts #ジミン https://www.instagram.com/p/CR-4tqxJK7G/?utm_medium=tumblr
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kintsuru · 5 years ago
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newseranet · 5 years ago
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http://erakokyu.net/politics/jimin/20200426/75758.html
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btsismywings · 7 years ago
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vivi.tv posted photos on their website “BTS (防弾少年団)・Vの#彼氏感が最高すぎ♡愛するワンちゃんと東京散歩 https://t.co/m4v8n78JfO” #bts #jin #suga #jhope #RM #jimin #v #jungkook
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pikasute · 8 years ago
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クリスチャントゥデイ
衆議院選挙2017 自民党のクリスチャンの立候補者 石破茂氏、麻生太郎氏、北村誠吾氏 クリスチャントゥデイ キリスト新聞」(67年)のインタビュー記事に、「聖書から離れて生きることはできない。祈りの中に神さまとの対話もつづけている」と語っている。 石破茂氏(60、10期)は鳥取1区(鳥取市、倉吉市など)で、共産党新人の塚田成幸(なるゆき)氏(50)と戦うが、前回(2014年)も ...
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stormblessed95 · 4 years ago
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helloo! I wanted to ask about how jungkook will usually refer to Jimin without honourifics but said he felt uncomfortable when tae told jungkook he could drop the honourifics with him? Usually jungkook refers to everyone as hyung, but will call jimin ’jiminssi’ and I was just curious about the difference and why he may do that? :)
Hello!
I talk about honorifics, what they are and how Jungkook uses them in this post:
And I talk very briefly about them here too:
I'll also mention that adding -ssi (씨, 氏) isn't necessarily speaking informally. Literally all 7 of the guys will address each other that way at times. Especially when speaking to the camera. It's a way of saying Mr. The difference comes in HOW Jungkook says it. Meaning it's often very very flirty in tone which is what makes Jimin laugh so hard every time. Jimin even told a fan at a fansign that if she wanted to call him like JK did, that JK uses a flirty tone when he does it and that it is even more flirty and pronounced whenever they are alone. Essentially, Jungkook uses the suffix as an endearment rather than just a term of respect. Sort of like if you were to say "yes sir" to a friend or coworker vs saying "yes sir" with more feeling, and inflection and flirtiness to your boyfriend. I encourage you to listen closely during vlives for example and the difference when Jin says "Ah Jiminssi, please tell us about xyz" and when JK says it.
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They often play around with honorifics to flirt. Like with the FaceTime calls, Jungkook was speaking overly formal in those tweets. Like how if you were dating someone in a higher social status, you might use that to flirt. Like if you were dating a CEO and would suggestively call him by his title and unnecessarily speak up to him. Or when Jimin speaks overly formal and uses honorifics with Jungkook even though he is the hyung in an effort to flirt with him, like in the black swan behinds from memories 2020. You just gotta listen to their tones and how they say things too.
Personally, it gets me even more with just how often and how casually Jungkook is constantly just leaving off the formalities all together without any thought about it. I give more examples of those interactions, here:
Hope this helped some!!
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newseranet · 5 years ago
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http://erakokyu.net/politics/jimin/20200422/75493.html
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newseranet · 6 years ago
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http://erakokyu.net/politics/jimin/20191222/66104.html
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newseranet · 6 years ago
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http://erakokyu.net/politics/jimin/20191210/59016.html
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newseranet · 6 years ago
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http://erakokyu.net/politics/jimin/20191113/57053.html
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newseranet · 6 years ago
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http://erakokyu.net/politics/jimin/20191004/54368.html
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newseranet · 6 years ago
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http://erakokyu.net/politics/jimin/20190914/53237.html
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