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Amae

甘え · ah-mah-eh · Japanese · noun
positiveintensity: mediumtrustjoy

The wish to depend on and be lovingly indulged by another.

Definition

The wish to depend on and be lovingly indulged by another — to presume upon and bask in another's benevolence. A key concept in Japanese psychology (Takeo Doi).

Connotation & usage

Unlike plain affection (a warm feeling), attachment (a bond), or dependence (a state), amae names a specific relational stance — the desire to be indulged, and the expectation that the other will willingly indulge without resentment. It carries a faint sense of immaturity yet is valued as the basis of trusting, intimate bonds; a child seeking coddling, or an adult playfully relying on a spouse's goodwill, “displays amae.”

Literal sense

From the verb amaeru “to depend on / presume upon another's benevolence,” from the adjective amai “sweet, indulgent.”

Related words

Etymology

Noun from the verb amaeru 甘える (“to presume on another's benevolence”), ultimately from amai 甘い “sweet, indulgent.”

How it has changed

Everyday Japanese vocabulary elevated to a psychological framework by Takeo Doi in The Anatomy of Dependence (甘えの構造, 1971; English 1973), where he argued amae — rooted in the infant–mother bond — is a key to Japanese interpersonal behavior.

Dispute & caveat

Doi's claim that amae is distinctively Japanese is contested: cross-cultural psychologists note similar dynamics exist universally (comparable to attachment theory), and critics argue his Freudian lens overstated its depth. Popular “uniquely Japanese, untranslatable” glosses flatten this debate.

Sources

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From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.