13 February 2015

« Qipao (China dress) » ~ MURAKAMI Suigun (borderline: ecchi-hentai)

« Qipao »
(China dress)
(hentai: Pururin.com • E-hentai.com — images: Danbooru)
~ MURAKAMI Suigun ~
(images: Danbooru)



Definitions



BDSM — a compound initialism from B&D (bondage and discipline), D&S (dominance and submission), and S&M (sadomasochism or sadism and masochism).

borderline — The fuzzy area where ecchi meets hentai.

chikubi (乳首) — Japanese for "nipples". 

ecchi (エッチ) — Refers to softcore or playful sexuality, within the Western animanga world, in contradistinction to the word 'hentai' which connotes hardcore, perversion or fetishism. Works described as ecchi do not show sexual intercourse or genitalia. (source: Wikipedia)

hentai (変態 or へんたい) — A catch-all term to describe a genre of anime and manga pornography. The Western viewers / readers of anime / manga adopts and uses the word 'hentai' which connotes hardcore, perversion or fetishism. (source: Wikipedia)

houkyou (豊胸) — Japanese for "full breasts".

karada (体) — Rope dress or a rope body harness used in Japanese bondage and other BDSM activities. (source: Wikipedia

oppai (おっぱい) — Japanese for "breasts", used only when the breasts are visible, no clothing or towels or the like obstructing the view, though visible nipples are not necessary.

paipan (白板) — An individual lacking pubic hair, usually depicted as female. This does not necessarily mean that the individuals hair was removed, it can also mean prepubescent.

pantsu (パンツ) — Japanese term which means panties. 

qipao (旗袍) — known in Mandarin Chinese as qipao (pronounced Wade-Giles ch'i-p'ao, 'banner gown'), it is a body-hugging one-piece Chinese dress for women. (source: Wikipedia)


shibari (縛り) — a Japanese word that literally means "to tie" or "to bind". However, this is a somewhat hidebound definition and the word shibari is now increasingly being re-imported from the West to Japan, as the tying communities are very much interconnected. Most Japanese kinbakushi do not object to the term shibari, as it's common vernacular in the global community. (source: Wikipedia)



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