|
Shintarō is any of several Japanese given names. They consist of a prefix followed by "tarō," which alone is a name common among first sons. Prefixes carry additional meaning, such as "new"; many of these can stand alone as a given name. Real people who have used the name include *(using the kanji 新太郎) * * actor Shintaro Katsu (stage name);〔(Katsu Shintarō )〕 * * former baseball player Shintarō Hirose (Yokohama Taiyō Whales and other teams); * * magician Shintarō Fujiyama *(using the kanji 慎太郎) * * Tokyo governor Shintaro Ishihara;〔(Ishihara Shintarō - Tōkyō governor )〕 * * Edo period Tosa han samurai Nakaoka Shintarō;〔(Nakaoka Shintaro portrait and bio )〕 * * Hokkaidō Nippon Ham Fighters baseball player Shintaro Ejiri; * * TBS announcer Shintarō Kaidō; * * Orix Buffaloes baseball player Shintaro Yoshida *(using the kanji 真太郎) Fukuoka Softbank Hawks baseball player Yoshitake Shintarō〔(Yoshitake Shintaro baseball profile )〕 *(using the kanji 晋太郎) politician Shintaro Abe In fiction, Akikusa Shintaro was the nom de guerre of the lead character from the cult 1960s Japanese TV series ''The Samurai''. In the anime, volume of light novels, manga, and Vocaloid series Kagerou Project, also known as Mekakucity Actors, the protagonist is named Shintarō Kisaragi. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Shintarō」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|