YABAI CAP Revival 復活!
"ヤバイ(Yabai)"
Means 'risky' in conventional Japanese usage, but has come to mean 'awesome' in popular usage
• 100% brushed washed cotton
• Unstructured, 6-panel, low-profile
• Vintage styling
• Pre-curved peak
• Stitched ventilation eyelets
• Self-fabric strap with a brass-effect buckle
more....
"yabai " by BUZZWORD
Yabai is an adjective denoting that something is bad or dangerous. Its original connotations were that the speaker felt he or she was in imminent danger or was about to be inconvenienced. The word is thought to derive from slang used by professional thieves and con artists and was already in use by the late Edo Period (1603-1868), when it was pronounced yaba. Some say it derives from the word ayabui, meaning dangerous.
Yabai began to take on a broader meaning in the 1980s as young people started using it to mean "uncool." As in the past, it still carried a negative connotation. That changed in the 1990s, however, when young people started using it in a positive sense to mean "very good" or "delicious," in much the same way that the English words bad and wicked have at times taken on positive connotations among younger generations. The colloquial pronunciation of the word, yabeh, is also popular.
"ヤバイ(Yabai)"
Means 'risky' in conventional Japanese usage, but has come to mean 'awesome' in popular usage
• 100% brushed washed cotton
• Unstructured, 6-panel, low-profile
• Vintage styling
• Pre-curved peak
• Stitched ventilation eyelets
• Self-fabric strap with a brass-effect buckle
more....
"yabai " by BUZZWORD
Yabai is an adjective denoting that something is bad or dangerous. Its original connotations were that the speaker felt he or she was in imminent danger or was about to be inconvenienced. The word is thought to derive from slang used by professional thieves and con artists and was already in use by the late Edo Period (1603-1868), when it was pronounced yaba. Some say it derives from the word ayabui, meaning dangerous.
Yabai began to take on a broader meaning in the 1980s as young people started using it to mean "uncool." As in the past, it still carried a negative connotation. That changed in the 1990s, however, when young people started using it in a positive sense to mean "very good" or "delicious," in much the same way that the English words bad and wicked have at times taken on positive connotations among younger generations. The colloquial pronunciation of the word, yabeh, is also popular.