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  2. Mar 13, 2017 · Honcho in English is an "英製和語" term derived from 班長【はんちょう】. In Japanese 班長【はんちょう】 refers to the head of a small group/team, and it's not really a big word. 班【はん】 means a team/group/squad of typically 3–10 people.

  3. Translation for 'honcho' in the free English-Japanese dictionary and many other Japanese translations.

  4. A relic of the large U.S. presence in Japan in the years following World War II, the word honcho comes from the Japanese word hanchō meaning “leader of the squad, section, group.”

  5. Sep 6, 2024 · From Japanese 班 (はん) 長 (ちょう) (hanchō, “ squad leader ”), from 19th c. Mandarin 班長 / 班长 (bānzhǎng, “ team leader ”). Probably entered English during World War II: many apocryphal stories describe American soldiers hearing Japanese prisoners-of-war refer to their lieutenants as hanchō.

  6. Oct 25, 2016 · It comes from the Japanese word 班長!. |In English we could say: "Who is the head honcho around here?" (Who is in charge) or "The head honcho said that we had to keep working" etc.

  7. Definition: 1) a top leader (as in politics) 2) a businessperson of exceptional wealth and power : magnate. They become tech tycoons by creating a media platform on which unpaid users do the work, for hours every day, and they sell ads against it. — Mary McNamara, The Los Angeles Times, 18 Apr. 2022.

  8. From Japanese 班長 (はんちょう, hanchō, “squad leader”), from 19th c. Mandarin bānzhǎng 班長 "team leader". Probably entered English during World War II: many apocryphal stories describe American soldiers hearing Japanese prisoners-of-war refer to their lieutenants as "hanchō".

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