どうもみんなさん
おはようこんにちはこんばんは
マルコてす ★
I have found some first personal pronoun from the web.
Watakushi 私 : Most polite and formal version
Watashi 私 : most common. Used more by women than men.
Atashi あたし : Mostly used by young females. Sounds cute.
Atai 私 : Slang version of "Atashi"
Washi わし : Mostly used by older men to younger or lower rank people.
Uchi うち : Used mostly by women. A neutral version also refers to "us" (family, company, etc.) as opposed to "them" or "you".
Jibun 自分 : Neutral. Refers to the "self", so can be use for "I" or "you". "Jibun no" (自分の) means "my" or "your" and "jibun de" (自分で) means "myself" or "youself".
Boku 僕 : Common for younger men (sometimes women). Sounds more refine than "ore".
Ore 俺 (also "Ora" in dialect) : Used by virile or older men. Not as polite as "watashi".
Oresama 俺様 : Arrogant and rude version of "Ore"
Onore 己 : Used by men. Sounds arrogant and impolite. Also means "self" or "you" (see "Jibun").
Sessha 拙者 : Used by men (formerly samurai). Humble and polite.
Ware 我 : Quite formal and polite, but old-fashioned (except plural "wareware", used in a humble way to talk about one's company).
Wate わて : Kansai dialect for "Watashi".
Chin 朕 : Used by emperors or kings.
Daikou 乃公 : Literary. Used by men when speaking in an haughty way.
Soregasi 某 : Ancient form of "Watakushi".
Warawa 妾 : Ancient form of "Watakushi".
Wagahai 我輩 : Has pompous connotations. Famous from Natsume Soseki's book wagahai wa neko de aru "I am a cat".
One's own name : Women and girls often refer to themselves using their own name, minus a title.
That's a lot of first personal pronoun in Japanese.
I will choose "Watashi 私" for myself in formal situation, it's because "Watashi 私" is common and well acceptable.
There's a video a want to share.
Part 1
Part 2
This a performance from the Japanese comedy group ラーメンズ (Rahmens).
It's quite funny about the geography of Japan.(...I should remember this video in my last project)