Japanese Social Media and Internet Slang Vocabulary: iine, Foro, Kusa, w, Ripu, DM, Enjo, Comment, and When Not to Use Them

You open the comments on a Japanese YouTube video. Someone posts wwwww. Someone else replies . A third person just writes それな. You have been studying Japanese for months, but none of this looks like anything in your textbook.

That is because Japanese online communication has its own dialect — a fast-moving mix of abbreviations, borrowed English, repurposed kanji, and platform-specific jargon. This guide covers the vocabulary you will actually encounter on Japanese social media, from the safe everyday terms like いいね (like) and フォロー (follow) to the slang you should recognize but handle carefully, like 炎上(えんじょう) (going up in controversy) and 晒す(さらす) (to expose). Where a term is risky or casual-only, this article will tell you exactly that.

Note: this article covers social media and internet language. If you are looking for Japanese vocabulary about devices — computers, smartphones, screens — that is a separate topic in the technology vocabulary series.

JapaneseReadingEnglishUsage Note
SNS(エスエヌエス)esu-en-esusocial media / social networking serviceStandard term; safe everywhere
投稿(とうこう)toukoupost / uploadBoth noun and verb; formal and casual
いいねiinelike (button / action)Universal; safe everywhere
フォローforoofollowUniversal; safe everywhere
フォロワーforowaafollowerUniversal; safe everywhere
リプripureply (to a post)Casual abbreviation of リプライ
DM(ディーエム)dii-emudirect messageCommon; neutral register
拡散(かくさん)kakusanspread / share widely / go viralAlso used as a request: 拡散希望
炎上(えんじょう)enjouonline controversy / getting flamedRecognize; do not use lightly
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Essential Japanese Social Media Vocabulary

Before diving into slang, you need the core vocabulary that appears on every Japanese social media platform. These are the standard words — safe to use in any register, and the ones you will see on every app interface.

JapaneseReadingEnglishExample Use
SNSesu-en-esusocial media (general)SNSで知り合った — “We met on social media”
投稿(とうこう)するtoukou suruto post / to upload写真を投稿した — “I posted a photo”
コメントkomentocommentコメントありがとう — “Thanks for the comment”
いいねiinelikeいいねが増えた — “I got more likes”
フォローforoofollowフォローよろしくお願いします — “Please follow me”
フォロワーforowaafollower / followersフォロワー1000人になった — “I hit 1,000 followers”
リプripureply (casual abbreviation)リプありがとう! — “Thanks for the reply!”
DM(ダイレクトメッセージ)dii-emudirect messageDMしてください — “Please DM me”
シェアsheashareシェアしてもらえると嬉しいです — “I’d be happy if you shared this”
拡散(かくさん)kakusanto spread / to share widely拡散希望 — “Please spread/share this”

A few notes on usage. 投稿する(とうこうする) works as both a noun (「今日の投稿」 = “today’s post”) and a verb (「投稿した」 = “I posted”). シェア and 拡散(かくさん) both mean “share,” but 拡散 carries a stronger sense of spreading widely — you will often see 拡散希望(かくさんきぼう) attached to announcements and emergency information, essentially a plea to repost.

リプ is the casual abbreviation of リプライ (reply). You will see it constantly on X (formerly Twitter), but it is considered casual slang — in a formal context, use 返信(へんじ) (reply) instead.

Platform Vocabulary: LINE, X, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok

Each platform has its own vocabulary. Knowing the platform-specific terms helps you navigate Japanese social media naturally — and avoids the confusion of using the wrong word in the wrong place.

LINE

LINE is Japan’s dominant messaging app — closer to WhatsApp than to Twitter. It has its own culture and its own vocabulary.

  • 既読(きどく) — “read” (the read receipt that appears when someone has opened your message). The absence of a reply after 既読 is socially significant — see 既読スルー below.
  • スタンプ — sticker. LINE stickers are far more expressive than standard emoji and are a core part of Japanese messaging culture.
  • グループ — group chat. グループを作る = “to create a group chat.”
  • タイムライン — the LINE feed/timeline, where users post updates visible to friends.
  • 通話(つうわ) — voice call. LINE通話 = LINE call.

X (formerly Twitter / ツイッター)

  • リツイート / RT — retweet / repost. Still widely used even after the platform rename.
  • 引用(いんよう)リツイート / 引用RT — quote retweet. Adding your own comment while resharing.
  • トレンド — trending. トレンド入り = “to enter trending.”
  • スペース — X Spaces (live audio rooms).
  • 鍵垢(かぎあか) — private account. 鍵 = lock, 垢(アカ)= account (slang). A 鍵垢 requires the account owner to approve followers.
  • 相互フォロー / 相互(そうご) — mutual follow. 相互フォローしませんか = “Want to follow each other?”

Instagram(インスタグラム / インスタ)

  • ストーリー — Story (24-hour post).
  • リール — Reels (short video).
  • フィード — the main photo/video grid.
  • インスタ映え(いんすたばえ) — “Instagrammable.” Something visually striking enough to post. 映え (bae) originally meant “to shine / look great.”

YouTube(ユーチューブ)

  • チャンネル登録(ちゃんねるとうろく) — subscribe to a channel. The standard phrase in Japanese YouTuber outros.
  • ライブ配信(らいばいしん)/ ライブ — live stream.
  • 高評価(こうひょうか) — thumbs up / like (on YouTube). チャンネル登録と高評価よろしくお願いします = “Please subscribe and like” — you will hear this constantly.
  • 再生数(さいせいすう) — view count.
  • 概要欄(がいようらん) — description box / “About” section under a video.

TikTok(ティックトック)

  • バズる — to go viral. Originally internet slang, now used across all platforms.
  • コメ — comment (casual abbreviation of コメント).
  • おすすめ — For You Page (recommended feed).
  • デュエット — Duet.

Basic Online Reactions in Japanese

These are the words and phrases you will drop into comment sections and reply threads. Some are completely safe at any level of formality; others are casual-only. The table below flags each one.

ExpressionReadingMeaningFormalitySafe to Use?
いいねiinenice / I like it / goodNeutralYes — all contexts
すごい / すごっsugoi / sugohamazing / wowCasualYes — comment sections fine
かわいい / かわいすぎkawaii / kawaisisugicute / way too cuteCasualYes — very common reaction
素敵(すてき)sutekilovely / wonderfulNeutral–PoliteYes — works in all registers
わかる / わかりみwakaru / wakarimiI get it / relatable / sameCasualわかる: yes. わかりみ: very casual slang
それなsorenaexactly / that’s it / I feel youCasual slangCasual only — not formal
最高(さいこう)saikouthe best / amazingNeutralYes — all contexts
おめでとうomedetoucongratulationsCasual (polite: おめでとうございます)Yes — match politeness to context
笑(わら) / wwara / wlol / hahaCasual slangComment sections only — not formal
草(くさ)kusaLOL / LMAO (see below)Casual slangRecognize — use cautiously

Kaomoji — text-based emoticons — are also a significant part of Japanese online expression. Unlike 4-byte emoji, kaomoji are standard ASCII and Unicode characters, so they are safe to use anywhere. Common ones you will see:

  • (^^) — happy / smiling
  • m(_ _)m — deep bow / apology / gratitude (very polite feel)
  • orz — figure collapsed on the floor / defeated / in despair
  • (T_T) — crying
  • (*^_^*) — happy and slightly flustered
  • (^^;) — awkward smile / nervous laugh

Japanese Internet Slang You Need to Recognize

This section covers the slang terms that appear constantly in Japanese online spaces. For each one, you will get the meaning and an honest assessment: is this something you should actively use, or just recognize when you see it?

草(くさ)/ www — the Japanese “lol”

w stands for 笑(わら) (laugh). Typing www or wwwww means you are laughing — the more w’s, the harder you are laughing. Over time, someone noticed that a long row of w’s looks like blades of grass, and the kanji 草(くさ) was adopted as shorthand for “so funny.” 草生える(くさはえる)= “grass is growing” = I’m dying of laughter.

Should you use it? Recognize it, and feel free to use it in very casual comment sections with peers. Do not use it in professional contexts, with strangers on formal platforms, or when commenting on a brand’s post.

乙(おつ)— “Good work” / “Thanks for that”

A casual abbreviation of お疲れ様(おつかれさま), the standard Japanese phrase for “good work” or “you must be tired.” Online, 乙 is used casually after someone completes a stream, a challenge, or an event. It can also carry a sarcastic or slightly dismissive edge depending on context.

Should you use it? Only in very casual gaming and streaming communities. In a work context, is inappropriate — use お疲れ様です(おつかれさまです) instead.

神(かみ)— “God-tier” / Amazing

Literally “god,” used online as an intensifier to mean something is exceptional. 神対応(かみたいおう) = amazing customer service or response. 神回(かみかい) = legendary episode (of an anime or show).

Should you use it? It is very casual slang. Fine in fan communities and gaming; avoid in any formal written Japanese.

ガチ — “Seriously” / “For real”

Derived from ガチンコ (a sumo term for a genuine match, as opposed to a fixed one). Online, ガチ means “genuinely,” “seriously,” or “hardcore.” ガチ勢(ガチぜい) = the hardcore/competitive crowd (in gaming, fandoms, etc.). ガチ恋(ガチこい) = genuinely falling in love with an idol or streamer (as opposed to a fan persona).

Should you use it? Casual slang. Use with friends or in gaming communities. Do not use in formal writing.

やばい — Good AND bad

This is one of the most important words to understand in modern Japanese. やばい originally meant “dangerous” or “terrible.” In modern casual Japanese, it has shifted to mean both “incredibly bad” AND “incredibly good” — context determines which. このラーメンやばい could mean “this ramen is amazing” or “this ramen is awful.” Tone and context carry the meaning.

Should you use it? It is so prevalent in casual speech that avoiding it entirely sounds unnatural among friends. However, do not use it in formal writing, job applications, or professional SNS posts. See the “What Not to Use in Formal Japanese” section for safer alternatives.

エモい — “Emotional” / Nostalgic / That feeling

Borrowed from the English word “emo,” but used in Japanese to describe a feeling of nostalgic emotion, wistfulness, or a bittersweet atmosphere. この曲エモい = “This song hits differently / gives me all the feels.” It is not negative — it describes a moving, emotionally resonant quality.

Should you use it? Casual slang, safe among younger audiences. Not suitable for formal contexts.

バズる — “To go viral”

From the English “buzz.” バズる means a post, video, or person has gone viral. この投稿がバズった = “This post went viral.” Relatively neutral in tone — simply means widespread attention.

Should you use it? Yes — it is now fairly mainstream in Japanese media coverage too, not just casual slang.

炎上(えんじょう)— Online controversy / Getting flamed

Literally “going up in flames.” When a post, account, or public figure becomes the target of mass criticism or harassment online, it 炎上する. 炎上案件(えんじょうあんけん) = “a controversy case.” This is a major cultural concept in Japanese internet culture — the scale of 炎上 can be large enough to end careers.

Should you use it? You should absolutely recognize it. Using it neutrally to describe a situation is fine. Do not use it casually as a joke — it describes serious public harm.

アンチ — Anti-fan / Hater

From English “anti.” アンチ refers to someone who actively dislikes and criticizes a specific person, idol, or content creator — going beyond indifference into deliberate negativity. Often appears alongside 炎上 vocabulary.

Should you use it? Neutral descriptive term. Fine to use when discussing online culture.

Yuka

Wait, so 草 literally means grass? How did “grass” end up meaning “lol”?

Rei

Right? It’s because wwwww looks like blades of grass lined up. So 草 became shorthand for “so many w’s it looks like a field.” Japanese internet culture is kind of amazing that way. 草

Comment Section Vocabulary

The comment section has its own language. These are the terms you need to navigate Japanese comment threads — not just to read them, but to understand the culture behind them.

JapaneseReadingEnglishNotes
コメントkomentocommentBoth the noun and the action (コメントする)
リプripureplyCasual; formal equivalent is 返信(へんじ)
返信(へんじ)henjireply / responseAppropriate in formal contexts
固定コメント(こていコメント)kotei komentopinned commentComment pinned by the creator at the top
ネタバレnetabarespoilerネタバレ注意 = “spoiler warning”
荒らし(あらし)arashitroll / spammerLiterally “storm.” Also the verb 荒らす = to troll/spam
通報(つうほう)tsuuhoureport (a user/comment)Standard term; also used for reporting to authorities
ブロックburokkublockブロックする = to block someone
ミュートmyuutomuteHides content without notifying the user
既読スルー(きどくスルー)kidoku suruu“read and ignore” — seen but not replied toSocially loaded in Japan; see below

The Culture of 既読スルー(きどくスルー)

This is one of the most culturally specific concepts for LINE users. 既読(きどく) means “already read” — the blue read receipt that appears in LINE when your message has been opened. スルー comes from English “through” and means to pass by or ignore. So 既読スルー = your message was opened and then deliberately not replied to.

In Japan, this has significant social weight. In a group of friends, being 既読スルーd can feel dismissive or rude. Some people deliberately delay opening messages to avoid being seen as ignoring the sender. The pressure to reply after a 既読 is real — and it is a social dynamic that does not translate directly from WhatsApp or iMessage culture, where read receipts are less emotionally loaded.

The opposite — leaving a message unopened — is called 未読スルー(みどくスルー) or 未読無視(みどくむし). Even more pointed.

Viral, Drama, and Online Trouble Vocabulary

Understanding the vocabulary of Japanese online controversy is important both for reading the news and for knowing what not to do yourself. Some of these terms describe things that are not just socially unacceptable in Japan — they may have legal consequences.

JapaneseReadingEnglishSeverity
バズるbazuruto go viral (positive or neutral)Neutral
炎上する(えんじょうする)enjou suruto get flamed / go up in controversySerious
拡散される(かくさんされる)kakusan sareruto be spread widely (passive)Neutral–Serious
アンチanchianti-fan / haterModerate
誹謗中傷(ひぼうちゅうしょう)hibou chuushoudefamation / online harassmentIllegal under Japanese law
デマdemafalse rumor / misinformationSerious — spreading デマ is a civil and criminal risk
釣り(つり)tsuriclickbait / troll bait / fake post to get reactionsModerate
晒す(さらす)sarasuto expose / to publicly share someone’s private informationIllegal in many contexts (doxxing)

バズる vs. 炎上する — a key contrast

Both words involve widespread attention, but the feeling is completely different.

バズる炎上する
ToneNeutral to positiveNegative — harmful
What spreadsA post, video, meme, songCriticism, anger, controversy
Typical causeInteresting / funny / heartwarming contentPerceived scandal, insensitivity, rule-breaking
ConsequenceMore followers, visibilityPotential career damage, harassment, legal action
Example sentenceその動画が突然バズった — “That video suddenly went viral”あの発言で炎上した — “They got flamed over that comment”

Important note on 誹謗中傷(ひぼうちゅうしょう)and 晒す(さらす): Japan has seen high-profile cases — including the death of a reality TV contestant following online abuse — that led to legal reforms. Posting defamatory content online or sharing someone’s personal information without consent can result in civil lawsuits or criminal charges under Japanese law. These are not just social norms — they are legal boundaries.

Yuka

So 炎上 is really serious then? I thought it just meant people were criticizing someone online.

Rei

It can range from mild criticism to full-on harassment campaigns. At the serious end, it involves thousands of people flooding someone’s mentions, and there have been cases that ended careers or had much worse consequences. It’s not a word to use lightly.

Casual vs. Polite Online Japanese

One of the most practical skills in Japanese social media is knowing when to use casual language and when to switch to standard polite Japanese. The same message can read very differently depending on the register — and using casual slang in the wrong place can come across as rude, immature, or disrespectful.

SituationCasualPolite / Standard
Complimenting a photoかわいすぎ!やばいとても素敵な写真ですね
Saying thanks for a replyリプありがとう!返信ありがとうございます
Congratulating someoneおめでとう!おめでとうございます
Agreeing with a postそれな / わかるおっしゃる通りだと思います
Saying something is amazing神! / やばっ素晴らしいと思います
Asking to be followed相互フォローしましょフォローよろしくお願いいたします

When casual is fine

  • Replying to close friends on LINE or private DM
  • Fan community comments on fan accounts, idol boards, anime pages
  • Replying to meme accounts, humor accounts, gaming streamers
  • Casual group chats where everyone uses casual Japanese

When you need polite / standard Japanese

  • Commenting on a brand’s official account
  • Replying to a public figure, politician, or someone you do not know personally
  • Professional SNS posts (LinkedIn equivalent in Japan, or company Twitter)
  • Work-related Slack or Teams channels
  • Any formal SNS announcements or public statements
  • Emailing or messaging a YouTuber or creator for a business or collaboration inquiry
Yuka

So if I comment “やばい!” on a famous Japanese singer’s Instagram post, that’s bad?

Rei

It won’t get you banned or anything, but it reads as very casual — almost like saying “whoa dude” to someone you’ve never met. You’d be better off with 素晴らしいです or 最高でした. Those still feel genuine but are appropriate for the situation.

What Not to Use in Formal Japanese

Below is an explicit list of internet slang terms you should avoid in any formal or semi-formal Japanese context — along with safer alternatives that convey the same meaning appropriately.

Avoid (casual/slang)MeaningUse instead (polite/standard)
草 / wwwlol / so funny笑い / 面白いですね / 😂 → 😂 as entity (or skip entirely in formal writing)
りょ(了)OK / got it / roger that了解しました / かしこまりました
ガチseriously / for real本当に / 本気で(ほんきで)
やばいamazing / terrible (dual meaning)素晴らしい / 大変(たいへん)/ 困った(こまった)— choose the accurate meaning
乙(おつ)good work / thanksお疲れ様です(おつかれさまです)
タメ口コメントplain-form comments to strangersUse ~です / ~ます form consistently
それなexactly / sameおっしゃる通りです / 同感です(どうかんです)
神(かみ)amazing / god-tier素晴らしい / 見事(みごと)

Note on りょ (了): This is an extremely casual abbreviation of 了解(りょうかい). Even 了解しました itself is considered overly casual in some formal Japanese business contexts — in very formal settings, かしこまりました is preferred. Know your audience.

Common Mistakes English Speakers Make with Japanese Online Language

1. Using slang in formal comments

Many English learners assume that internet language is the same everywhere. But commenting “やばっ!神!” on a Japanese company’s official product announcement, or on a public figure’s formal statement, is the equivalent of typing “omg insane bro!!” in a professional email. The register mismatch is jarring even if the content is positive.

2. Overusing やばい

やばい is extremely useful in casual speech, but its dual meaning (good/bad) can cause confusion. Saying この料理、やばい! with an enthusiastic tone means it is delicious. Said with a disgusted face, it means the opposite. In writing — where tone is absent — you should be careful, or choose a more specific word.

3. Misreading 草 and 笑 as negative

English speakers sometimes read 笑(わら) appended to a message as sarcastic or mocking — the way “lol” can be passive-aggressive in English. In Japanese online contexts, is usually light and genuinely amused, not cutting. Context matters, but the default reading is friendly.

4. Copying anime-style speech patterns literally

Anime characters often speak in exaggerated, distinctive, or archaic styles — 〜でござる, 〜だぜ, 〜わ, dramatic sentence-ending particles. These are character voices, not normal Japanese. Using anime speech in actual comments or messages tends to read as strange or childish to native Japanese speakers.

5. Not recognizing 既読スルー social norms

In English messaging culture, it is reasonably normal to read a message and reply hours later, or to leave a casual message on read without guilt. In Japan — especially on LINE among friends and colleagues — this can cause social friction. If you are communicating with Japanese people on LINE, understand that the 既読 feature creates a different set of social expectations than you may be used to.

6. Treating LINE like iMessage

LINE has its own social norms that differ from Western messaging apps. Sticker replies are a genuine form of communication, not a joke. Group LINE chats for work, school, or family carry real social obligations. Leaving a group without warning is considered rude. Reply speed and the presence or absence of 既読 are noticed and interpreted. If you join a Japanese group LINE, observe before you act.

Have you encountered any of these terms on Japanese social media? Which Japanese internet slang do you find most interesting or confusing — and are there any Japanese accounts you follow that helped you learn? Leave a comment below and let us know!

Quick Quiz

Test what you have learned. Check your answers below.

Questions

  1. What does mean in an online comment, and where does the expression come from?
  2. You receive a LINE message and see 既読 appear, but the person does not reply for three days. What is this called, and why does it matter?
  3. A friend posts a cooking video and the comments say 神! and 最高!. Are these positive or negative reactions?
  4. You want to comment on a famous Japanese company’s official SNS post to say their product is wonderful. Which is more appropriate: やばっ!神! or 素晴らしい商品ですね?
  5. What is the difference between バズる and 炎上する? Give a short example sentence for each.

Answers

  1. means “so funny” or “LOL.” It comes from the visual resemblance of many w’s (www = わら = 笑 = laugh) to blades of grass. The more w’s, the more the row looks like a grassy field — so 草 became shorthand for “the w’s are growing into a field.”
  2. This is called 既読スルー(きどくスルー) — “read and ignore.” In Japanese messaging culture (especially LINE), it carries social weight: the recipient demonstrably saw your message but chose not to reply, which can feel dismissive depending on the relationship.
  3. Both are positive. 神(かみ) means “god-tier / amazing,” and 最高(さいこう) means “the best / excellent.” These are enthusiastic compliments.
  4. 素晴らしい商品ですね is the appropriate choice. やばっ!神! is casual internet slang that would read as overly familiar and inappropriate on a brand’s formal SNS post.
  5. バズる = to go viral (neutral/positive). Example: そのMVが一夜でバズった — “That music video went viral overnight.” / 炎上する(えんじょうする) = to face mass online criticism (negative). Example: あの発言で大炎上した — “They got massively flamed over that comment.”

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