I'm sure most of you know this phrase, what does it mean? Does it represent stupidity cutey thing that they do? What makes this phrase so popular?
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3The instance from *Oregairu* above is likely [a reference to Peko-chan](http://anime.stackexchange.com/questions/2995/what-is-the-origin-of-this-facial-expression-with-ones-tongue-sticking-out), which is very common in modern anime. – Logan M Dec 10 '13 at 20:27
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http://anime.stackexchange.com/questions/2995/what-is-the-origin-of-this-facial-expression-with-ones-tongue-sticking-out/3003#3003 – Toshinou Kyouko Dec 11 '13 at 17:39
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2Meta discussion at http://meta.anime.stackexchange.com/questions/766/are-these-two-tongue-sticking-out-questions-really-duplicates – Logan M Dec 16 '13 at 00:21
2 Answers
The head punching and tongue sticking out makes me think the "teehee" is a translation of てへぺろ ("tehepero"), which has a literal meaning of "teehee tongue-sticking-out". It actually has a recent history as a word in its own right: this blog post and this crunchyroll news article have some information about it.
Basically, it's the word that goes with teehee+punching head+tongue sticking out, and the meaning is primarily focused on definition 3) that Omega posted - it sweeps under the rug a mistake or ignorance of the speaker with a playful gesture. A Japanese source for this meaning is this scan of an article about tehepero being Japanese neologism of the year, although the expression is likely related to peko-chan (see What is the origin of this facial expression with one's tongue sticking out?).
I don't think that it is of japanese origin though.
Teehee is just a cute giggle, pretty common internet slang. More on it can be found at the Urban Dictionary, mainly
The sound of a giggle. Used by (1) schoolgirls and (2) old geezers pretending to be schoolgirls.
and
Defintion: 1)The act of joyful giggling. 2)A noise made to convey happiness 3)Presented to imply innocence
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