kaigou: this is what I do, darling (sakura)
[personal profile] kaigou
Anyone know the more formal term for what some fandoms *cough*WK*cough* call 'eartails'? I know there's an actual term for them. I just can't recall what it is. Any ideas?

Date: 10 Jun 2007 09:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kenderlyn.livejournal.com
I think I've heard them referred to as 'momiage' or something like that. no idea what that's supposed to mean or anything, the word just fires a synapse or two.

Date: 10 Jun 2007 02:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sil-leg.livejournal.com
What I got was: Eartails - momiage? Anyway, they're the little wisps of hair that hang just in front of your ears. Hmmm... Most anime girls have those. And Aya from Weiss Kreuz. *__*
from http://www.fullmetal-alchemist.com/forums/lofiversion/index.php/t643-550.html

Date: 10 Jun 2007 03:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ramenkuri.livejournal.com
I looked it up; apparently momiage a Japanese word for sideburns or tufts of hair under the temple. 揉み上げ
And here I've been pronouncing it incorrectly in my mind.

Date: 18 Jun 2007 04:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] solitude1056.livejournal.com
I've heard "momiage", but I thought it was a french word. Hunh! ;-)

Date: 18 Jun 2007 05:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] solitude1056.livejournal.com
Except that momiage are sideburns, which is defined as "hair that grows from directly above/in front of the ears" and eartails (like the hime/princess cut long side fringe) are hair that grows from the temples, an inch or so above the sideburns section of the face.

And I'm almost positive there's a technical term for "noticeably longer hair grown from the temples" ...but the only reference I could find was -- unbelieveably -- to peyot, which are the extra-long locks grown by Hassidic men. Okay, not quite what I meant!

Guess I'll just have to tell my stylist about the hime-cut style, and the notion of "extra long side fringe" and consider that the technical term between the two of us. ;-)

Eartails!

Date: 30 Jul 2012 03:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trepto.myopenid.com
Boy I hope you're notified of this comment! I've been wondering this for years and only tonight went "well duh, look it up as a boolean search for 'hair AND temples', silly".

Let's see how far my pidgin fangirl Japanese can get us. ^_^ These're in JIS encoding, so if they look funny try to see if your browser supports JIS. When I can I'll include Halpern reference numbers since they're the ones I'm familiar with.

鬢 "bin/hin" : sideburns, sidelocks, hair at the temples. Not quite, but it's a single kanji which is cool. (Weirdo rare kanji, no Halpern ref #.)

鬢髪 "binbatsu" : hair at the temples, hair at the sides of the head. "-batsu" is Halpern 2846, "hair of the head". Still has that darned sideburn-specific kanji in it though.

茶利 "chari" : ooh, archaic. Apparently once upon a time this meant the hair on a woman's temples. Now it means a funny word or gesture. Interesting. "Cha" is Halpern 2259, "tea" (O_o no, really) & ri is 1114, "benefit".

揉み上げ "momiage" : sideburns, sidelocks. "Mo" is another rare one with no Halpern reference which can mean "to rub" or "to worry" and "a" is up/above (Halpern 3404). This can also be written without the hiragana "mi" but pronounced the same way.

I think I like "binbatsu" best, since "momiage" is so specifically sideburns/sidelocks (which are grown out sideburns anyway).

Anyhoo. I'm off to put conditioner on my binbatsu. (That... sounds filthy.) On the off chance that this posts *and* you're notified **and** for whatever reason you'd like to communicate further with this here nerd, my email addy's ordinant underscore trepto at yahoo dot com ^_^ .