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Youjo

Youjo, written with the kanji 幼女 and read youjo (sometimes rendered yōjo in macronized form), is a Japanese noun meaning a young girl, typically a female child from infancy to preadolescence. In English-language writing, it is commonly romanized as "youjo," though some sources use "yōjo." It is distinct from shōjo (少女), which can refer more broadly to girls or young women and is widely used in media aimed at a slightly older audience.

In everyday usage, youjo refers to a very young female child and can carry connotations of innocence

In popular culture, youjo appears in titles and descriptions involving young female characters. A notable example

See also: shōjo; Japanese terms for girls in media; romanization and readings of Japanese kanji.

or
vulnerability
depending
on
context.
The
first
kanji,
幼,
denotes
youth
or
infancy,
while
女
denotes
a
female.
is
Youjo
Senki
(幼女戦記),
translated
as
The
Saga
of
Tanya
the
Evil,
a
light
novel
series
by
Carlo
Zen
that
has
been
adapted
into
an
anime.
The
title
literally
references
a
young
girl
within
a
narrative
about
military
conflict
in
a
fantasy
world,
and
the
work
is
often
discussed
in
relation
to
its
themes
and
protagonist.