Abbreviated and contracted words are a common feature of Japanese. Long words are often contracted into shorter forms, which then become the predominant forms. For example, the University of Tokyo, in Japanese TÅkyÅ Daigaku (æ±äº¬å¤§å¦) becomes TÅdai (æ±å¤§), and "remote control", rimÅto kontorÅrÄ (remote controller), becomes rimokon. Names are also contracted in this way. For example Takuya Kimura, in Japanese Kimura Takuya, an entertainer, is referred to as Kimutaku.
The names of some very familiar companies are also contractions. For example, Toshiba is a contraction of "Tokyo Shibaura", and Nissan is a contraction of "Nippon Sangyo".
The contractions may be commonly used, or they may be specific to a particular group of people. For example the "Kokuritsu KankyÅ KenkyÅ«jo" (å½ç«ç'°å¢ç "ç©¶æ, National Institute for Environmental Sciences of Japan, NIES) is known as Kanken (ç'°ç ") by its employees, but this terminology is not familiar to most Japanese.
Patterns of contraction
Japanese words are spelled using characters that represent syllables (morae), rather than individual phonetic units (phonemes) as in the English alphabet. These characters are compiled into two syllabaries: hiragana and katakana. Japanese also makes extensive use of adopted Chinese characters, or kanji, which may be pronounced with one or more syllables. Therefore, when a word or phrase is abbreviated, it does not take the form of initials, but the key characters of the original phrase, such that a new word is made, often recognizably derived from the original. In contracted kanji words, the most common pattern of contraction is to take the first kanji of each word in a phrase and put them together as a portmanteau. In the example from the lead, using TÅkyÅ Daigaku (æ±äº¬å¤§å¦), the TÅ- of TÅkyÅ and the Dai- of Daigaku becomes TÅdai (æ±å¤§), the common abbreviation for the University of Tokyo.
There are also instances in which alternative readings of a particular kanji are used in the contraction. For example, Nagoya's main subway station, Nagoya Station, is referred to by locals as Meieki (åé§ ), a contraction of "Nagoya-Eki" (åå¤å±é§ ), in which the alternative reading of Na- (å), the first character in "Nagoya", is used.
In loanwords and names, the most common pattern is to take the first two morae (or kana) of each of the two words, and combine them forming a new, single word. For example "family restaurant" or famirī resutoran becomes famiresu.
YÅon sounds, those sounds represented using a kana ending in i and a small ya, yu or yo kana, such as kyo count as one mora. Japanese long vowels count as two morae, and may disappear (the same can be said for the sokuon, or small tsu); Harry Potter, originally HarÄ« PottÄ, is contracted to Haripota, or otherwise be altered; actress Kyoko Fukada, Fukada KyÅko, becomes Fukakyon.
These abbreviated names are so common in Japan that many companies initiate abbreviations of the names of their own products. For example, the animated series Pretty Cure marketed itself under the four-character abbreviated name purikyua.
Long kanji names

Loanwords
Three and four character loanwords
Abbreviations
Created words
Many abbreviations, especially four-character words, have been created for particular products or TV shows.
Contractions of names
Highways and railway lines
Many highways and railway lines have names that are contractions of the names of their endpoints. For example, æ±åé«éé"è·¯ (Tomei Expressway) takes one kanji æ± (tÅ) from æ±äº¬ (Tokyo) and the other å (mei) from åå¤å± (Nagoya; its pronunciation changes from the kun'yomi na to the on'yomi mei). æ±æ¥æ±æ¨ªç· (Tokyu Toyoko Line) links Tokyo and æ¨ªæµ Yokohama, taking part of its name from each city.
Other examples include:
Sometimes names of this type preserve older place names. For instance, the character æ¦ is taken from the word æ¦è"µ (Musashi), which was once the name of the Japanese province in which the city of Tokyo was located, can still be seen in the company names æ±æ¦ (Tobu or "East Musashi"), è¥¿æ¦ (Seibu or "West Musashi"), and in the åæ¦ç· (Nanbu Line or "South Musashi Line").
Some other examples:
Single letters as abbreviations
Many single letters of the Latin alphabet have names that resemble the pronunciations of Japanese words or characters. Japanese people use them in contexts such as advertising to catch the reader's attention. Other uses of letters include abbreviations of spellings of words. Here are some examples:
- E: è¯ã (ii; the word for "good" in Japanese). The letter appears in the name of the company e-homes.
- J: The first letter of "Japan" as in J.League, J-Phone.
- Q: The kanji ä¹ ("nine") have the reading kyÅ«. Japanese "Dial Q2" premium-rate telephone numbers start with 0990.
- S, M: used for sadism and masochism respectively, often referring to mild personality traits rather than sexual fetishes. "SM" is also used for sadomasochism, instead of "S&M" used in English, in a more sexual context.
- W: The English word "double." Japanese people sometimes pronounce the letter "double." For example, âWãã¼ãâ (W deeto) means "double date(s)"; "WW Burger" from Freshness Burger has double beef and double cheese.
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