Senpai is a Japanese word pertaining to a male senior of yours.
senpai
Its a Japanese name for Someone you have a crush on
A senpai is someone who is more experienced or senior in a group, while a kohai is someone who is less experienced or junior. The relationship between senpai and kohai is often seen in Japanese culture, particularly in schools or workplaces, where senpai guide and mentor kohai.
The word for the junior is kōhai (後輩) he is considered a junior of his Senpai (先輩)Senpai is often seen romanized as "sempai" because it is pronounced that way (the Japanese "n" (ん) is pronounced as "m" when it comes before bilabials, such as "p").A kōhai is expected to respect and obey their senpai, and the senpai in turn must guide, protect, and teach their kōhai as best they can. Senpai/kōhai relationships generally last for as long as the two people concerned stay in contact, even if the original context in which the senpai was senior is no longer relevant.
It's senpai not sempai and she calls them that because...in Japanese society the Japanese word "senpai," means a senior or superior in any academic or corporate organization in society. so she basically just calls them that out of respect.
'Senpai' is used to refer to someone who is your superior.
It's Japanese language. Koudai means junior in English while Senpai means senior.
Senpai's job is to not notice his kouhei.
A senpai is used when the person who are referred to are older than that person who are speaking. In Japanese society, especially for middle-schoolers and highschoolers, 呼び捨て (yobi-sute) or calling someone older than you without adding senpai are considered rude.
Senpai is busy at the moment. Leave a message after the beep.
Well, it depends on what your status is. If you are younger, or of lower status than the student, you would call him or her 'senpai.'