Master These 100 Common Kanji Characters to Write Japanese (2024)

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Master These 100 Common Kanji Characters to Write Japanese (1)

Japanese

  • Essential Japanese Vocabulary
    • Japanese Grammar

    By

    Namiko Abe

    Namiko Abe

    Japanese Language Expert

    • B.A., Kwansei Gakuin University

    Namiko Abe is a Japanese language teacher and translator, as well as a Japanese calligraphy expert. She has been a freelance writer for nearly 20 years.

    Learn about ourEditorial Process

    Updated on May 02, 2024

    Kanji is one of three different writing systems in Japanese, the other being the two kana systems, hiragana and katakana. Adapted from Chinese characters over 1,000 years ago, kanji remains the most common form of Japanese written communication.

    With multiple writing systems, two phonetic and one symbolic, the Japanese language may seem intimidating to new students, and memorizing the most common kanji symbols and other scripts does indeed take time and practice. But once you've mastered them, you'll discover a means of written communication unlike anything in the English language. Below you'll find 100 of the most common kanji characters—including the characters for power, rice, city, and more.

    Kanji Symbols

    Kanji is symbolic, or logographic. It is the most common means of written communication in the Japanese language, with more than 50,000 different symbols by some estimates. However, most Japanese can get by using about 2,000 different kanji in everyday communication. A single kanji character can have multiple meanings depending on how it is pronounced and the context in which it is used.

    Hiragana and Katakana

    Read MoreJapanese Scripts Unveiled: Kanji, Hiragana, KatakanaBy Namiko Abe

    Hiragana and katakanaare both phonetic (or syllabic) writing systems. There are 46 basic characters in each. Hiragana is used primarily to spell words that haveJapanese roots or grammatical elements. Katakana is used to spell foreign and technical words ("computer," for example), or used for emphasis.

    Romanji

    Western characters and words, sometimes called romanji,are also common in modern Japanese. Typically, these are reserved for words derived from Western languages, especially English. The word "T-shirt" in Japanese, for example, consists of a T and several katakana characters. Japanese advertising and media frequently use English words for stylistic emphasis.

    For everyday purposes, most writing contains kanji characters because it's the most efficient, expressive means of communication. Complete sentences written only in hiragana and katakana would be extremely long and resemble a jumble of letters, not a full thought. But when used in conjunction with kanji, the Japanese language becomes full of nuance.

    Kanji has its historical roots in Chinese writing. The word itself means "Chinese (or Han) characters." Early forms were first used in Japan as early as A.D. 800 and evolved slowly into the modern era, along with hiragana and katakana. Following Japan's defeat in World War II, the government adopted a series of rules designed to simplify the most common kanji characters to make them easier to learn.

    Elementary school students have to learn about 1,000 characters. That number doubles by high school. Beginning in the late 1900s, Japanese education officials have added more and more kanji to the curriculum. Because the language has such deep historical roots, literally thousands more kanji have evolved over time and are still in use.

    Common Kanji Characters

    Here are 100 of the most frequently used kanji in Japanese newspapers. Newspapers give a great representation of the best and most useful kanji to learn because you are more likely to come across these characters in day-to-day use.

    sun
    one
    big
    year
    middle
    to meet
    human being, people
    book
    moon, month
    long
    country
    to go out
    up, top
    10
    life
    child
    minute
    east
    three
    to go
    same
    now
    high, expensive
    money, gold
    time
    hand
    to see, to look
    city
    power
    rice
    oneself
    before
    yen (Japanese currency)
    to combine
    to stand
    inside
    two
    affair, matter
    company, society
    person
    ground, place
    capital
    interval, between
    rice field
    body
    to study
    down, under
    eye
    five
    after
    new
    bright, clear
    direction
    section
    .女woman
    eight
    heart
    four
    people, nation
    opposite
    main, master
    right, correct
    to substitute, generation
    to say
    nine
    small
    to think
    seven
    mountain
    real
    to enter
    to turn around, time
    place
    field
    to open
    10,000
    whole
    to fix
    house
    north
    six
    question
    to speak
    letter, writings
    to move
    degree, time
    prefecture
    water
    inexpensive, peaceful
    courtesy name (Mr., Mrs.)
    harmonious, peace
    government, politics
    to maintain, to keep
    to express, surface
    way
    phase, mutual
    mind, meaning
    to start, to emit
    not, un-, in-
    political party

    Key Takeaways

    • Kanji is a symbolic writing system adapted from Chinese characters; the word itself actually means "Chinese (or Han) characters."
    • Though it remains the most common form of written communication in Japanese, kanji complements the phonetic systems of hiragana and katakana.
    • Kanji continues to evolve today, with more than 50,000 symbols currently in existence, according to some estimates.

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    Your Citation

    Abe, Namiko. "100 of the Most Common Kanji Characters." ThoughtCo, May. 2, 2024, thoughtco.com/the-most-frequently-used-kanji-2028155.Abe, Namiko. (2024, May 2). 100 of the Most Common Kanji Characters. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/the-most-frequently-used-kanji-2028155Abe, Namiko. "100 of the Most Common Kanji Characters." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/the-most-frequently-used-kanji-2028155 (accessed June 23, 2024).

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    Master These 100 Common Kanji Characters to Write Japanese (2024)

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