Japanese - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Japan + -ese after the model of earlier Portuguese japonês, New Latin japonensis, French japonais, etc.
Japanese (not comparable)
- Of, relating to, or derived from Japan, its people, language, or culture.
A Japanese saw is one that cuts on the pull stroke rather than on the push stroke.
In the United States, Japanese animation has had a tremendous surge in popularity over the last few years.
2013 February 6, Hideo Otake, “Revising the Interpretation of the Japanese Economy”, in Michio Muramatsu, Frieder Naschold, editors, State and Administration in Japan and Germany: A Comparative Perspective on Continuity and Change[1], page 319:
Japanese retail stores have strove to, and have succeeded in, fulfilling these severe demands, and in doing so, have constantly had to innovate both technologically and institutionally in order to keep up with the competition.
- Of or relating to the Yamato people.
The Ainu were subject to forced assimilation by the Japanese since at least the 18th century.
of or relating to Japan
- Afrikaans: Japannees (af), Japans (af)
- Albanian: japonez (sq)
- Arabic: يَابَانِيّ (yābāniyy)
- Armenian: ճապոնական (hy) (čaponakan)
- Asturian: xaponés (ast)
- Azerbaijani: yapon (az)
- Basque: japoniar
- Belarusian: япо́нскі (japónski)
- Bengali: জাপানি (bn) (japani)
- Bulgarian: япо́нски (japónski)
- Burmese: ဂျပန် (gya.pan)
- Catalan: japonès (ca)
- Chinese:
- Czech: japonský (cs) m
- Danish: japansk
- Dutch: Japans (nl), Japanse (nl), Nippons (dated)
- Esperanto: japana (eo)
- Estonian: jaapani
- Faroese: japanskur
- Finnish: japanilainen (fi), japaninkielinen (fi)
- French: japonais (fr)
- Friulian: gjaponês
- Galician: xaponés (gl) m, xaponesa f
- Georgian: იაპონური (ka) (iaṗonuri)
- German: japanisch (de)
- Greek: ιαπωνικός (el) (iaponikós)
- Hawaiian: Kepanī, Iāpana
- Hebrew: יַפָּנִי (yapáni)
- Hindi: जापानी (hi) (jāpānī)
- Hungarian: japán (hu)
- Icelandic: japanskur (is)
- Indonesian: Jepang (id)
- Interlingua: japonese (ia)
- Irish: Seapánach
- Italian: giapponese (it), nipponico (it) m
- Japanese: 日本 (ja) (Nihon, Nippon), 日本の (Nihon no..., Nippon no...), 日 (ja) (Nichi-, Ni-) (used in compounds), 和 (ja) (Wa-) (of language or style)
- Kazakh: жапон (japon)
- Khmer: ជប៉ុន (km) (cĕəʼpon)
- Korean: 일본(日本)의 (ilbon-ui), 일(日) (ko) (il), 왜(倭) (ko) (wae) (of ancient Japan)
- Kurdish:
- Kyrgyz: жапон (ky) (japon)
- Lao: ຍີ່ປຸ່ນ (lo) (nyī pun)
- Latin: japonensis, japonicus, nipponensis, nipponicus (New Latin)
- Latvian: japānisks, japāņu
- Lithuanian: japoniškas m, japoniška f
- Lombard: please add this translation if you can
- Luxembourgish: japanesch
- Macedonian: јапонски (japonski)
- Malay: Jepun (ms)
- Malayalam: ജാപ്പനീസ് (ml) (jāppanīsŭ)
- Marathi: जापानी (jāpānī)
- Mongolian: япон (japon)
- Norwegian:
- Occitan: japonés (oc)
- Pashto: جاپانی (ps) (ǰāpānáy)
- Persian: ژاپنی (fa) (žâponi)
- Piedmontese: giaponèis
- Polish: japoński (pl)
- Portuguese: japonês (pt), nipônico (pt)
- Romani: źapanikano
- Romanian: japonez (ro)
- Romansch: giapunais m, giapunaisa f
- Russian: япо́нский (ru) (japónskij)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ја̀па̄нскӣ m
- Roman: jàpānskī (sh) m
- Slovak: japonský (sk)
- Slovene: japonski (sl)
- Spanish: japonés (es), nipón (es) (uncommon), ponja (es) (Andes)
- Swahili: Kijapani
- Swedish: japansk (sv)
- Tagalog: Hapon (tl)
- Tajik: ҷопонӣ (tg) (joponi), ҷопон (jopon), японӣ (tg) (yaponi), япон (yapon)
- Thai: ญี่ปุ่น (th) (yîi-bpùn)
- Tibetan: ཉི་ཧོང (nyi hong), རི་པིན (ri pin)
- Turkish: Japon (tr)
- Turkmen: ýapon (tk)
- Ukrainian: япо́нський (uk) (japónsʹkyj)
- Urdu: جاپانی (jāpānī)
- Uyghur: ياپون (yapon)
- Uzbek: yapon (uz)
- Vietnamese: Nhật (vi) (日 (vi)), thuộc Nhật
- Volapük: Yapänik (vo)
- Yiddish: יאַפּאַניש (yapanish)
Japanese (countable and uncountable, plural Japanese or Japaneses)
- (countable, chiefly in the plural) A person living in or originating from Japan, or of Japanese ancestry.
A Japanese will typically have black hair, brown eyes, and pale skin.
- 2007 October 16, Madeleine Brand, “Japan Struggles to Meet Its CO2 Emissions Limits”, Day to Day, National Public Radio,
- Motoyuki Shibata isn’t a typical Japanese.
1938, Ogden Nash, The Japanese:
How courteous is the Japanese;
He always says, "Excuse it, please."
- (uncountable) Ellipsis of Japanese food.
Let’s go out to eat. I’m in the mood for Japanese.
- As with other terms for people formed with -ese, the countable singular noun in reference to a person (as in "I am a Japanese", "writing about Japanese cuisine as a Japanese") is uncommon and often taken as incorrect. In its place, the adjective is used, by itself (as in "I am Japanese") or before a noun like person, man, or woman ("writing about Japanese cuisine as a Japanese person"). See also -ish, which is similarly only used primarily as an adjective or as a plural noun. However it is rather frequent in East Asia as a translation for the demonym written 日本人 (rìběnrén) in Chinese or 日本人 (Nihonjin) in Japanese.
person of Japan
- Afrikaans: Japannees (af), Japanner (af)
- Ainu: シサㇺ (sisam)
- Albanian: japonez (sq) m
- Aleut: Yapuunax̂, Yapuunix̂
- Arabic: يَابَانِيّ m (yābāniyy), يَابَانِيَّة (ar) f (yābāniyya)
- Armenian: ճապոնացի (čaponacʻi)
- Asturian: xaponés (ast) m
- Azerbaijani: yapon (az)
- Basque: japoniar
- Belarusian: япо́нец m (japónjec), япо́нка f (japónka)
- Bengali: জাপানি (bn) (japani)
- Breton: japaneg (br) m
- Bulgarian: япо́нец m (japónec), япо́нка f (japónka)
- Catalan: japonès (ca) m, japonesa (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Czech: Japonec (cs) m, Japonka (cs) f
- Danish: japaner (da), japanere pl
- Dutch: Japanner (nl) m, Japanse (nl) f
- Esperanto: japano (eo), japanino
- Estonian: jaapanlane (for male, female), jaapanlanna (for female), jaapanlased (for plural)
- Faroese: japani m, japanari m, japansmaður m
- Finnish: japanilainen (fi)
- French: Japonais (fr) m, Japonaise (fr) f, Nippon (fr) m, Nippone f
- Galician: xaponés (gl) m, xaponesa f
- Georgian: იაპონელი (iaṗoneli)
- German: Japaner (de) m (Japanerin (de) f; Japanese (de) m)
- Greek: Ιάπωνας (el) m (Iáponas), Ιαπωνίδα (el) f (Iaponída)
- Guaraní: hapõgua
- Hawaiian: Iāpana, Kepanī
- Hebrew: יַפָּנִי m (yapáni), יַפָּנִית (he) f (yapanít)
- Hindi: जापानी (hi) (jāpānī)
- Hungarian: japán (hu)
- Icelandic: Japani (is) m
- Ido: Japoniano (io)
- Indonesian: orang Jepang
- Interlingua: japonese (ia)
- Irish: Seapánach m
- Italian: giapponese (it) m or f
- Japanese: 日本人 (ja) (nihonjin, nipponjin), ジャパニーズ (ja) (Japanīzu) (colloquial)
- Jeju: 웨인 (wein)
- Kazakh: жапон (japon)
- Khmer: ជប៉ុន (km) (cea’pon)
- Korean: 일본인(日本人) (ko) (ilbonin), 일본 사람 (ilbon saram)
- Kyrgyz: жапон (ky) (japon)
- Latin: Iapō m or f
- Latvian: japānis m, japāniete f
- Lithuanian: japonas (lt) m, japonė (lt) f
- Luxembourgish: Japaner m, Japanerin f
- Macedonian: Јапонец m (Japonec), Јапонка f (Japonka)
- Malay: orang Jepun
- Miyako: please add this translation if you can
- Mongolian:
- Navajo: Binááʼádaałtsʼózí dineʼé
- Nivkh: сисам (sisam)
- Norwegian:
- Occitan: japonés (oc) m, japonesa f
- Okinawan: please add this translation if you can
- Persian: ژاپنی (fa) (žâponi)
- Polish: Japończyk (pl) m pers, Japonka (pl) f
- Portuguese: japonês (pt) m, japonesa (pt) f
- Romani: źaponèzo m, źaponèza f, japànco m, japànka f
- Romanian: japonez (ro) m, japoneză (ro) f
- Romansch: giapunais m, giapunaisa f
- Russian: япо́нец (ru) m (japónec), япо́нка (ru) f (japónka)
- Sardinian: giaponesu m, giaponesa f, giapponesu m, giapponesa f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Slovak: Japonec (sk) m, Japonka f, Japončík m (colloquial)
- Slovene: Japonec (sl) m, Japonka f
- Southern Altai: јопон (ǰopon)
- Spanish: japonés (es) m, japonesa (es) f, nipón (es) m (uncommon), nipona (es) f (uncommon)
- Swahili: Mjapani (sw)
- Swedish: japan (sv) c (male), japanska (sv) c (female)
- Tagalog: Hapones (tl)
- Tajik: японӣ (tg) (yaponi), япон (yapon), ҷопонӣ (tg) (joponi), ҷопон (jopon)
- Thai: คนญี่ปุ่น (kon yîi-bpùn)
- Tibetan: ཉི་ཧོང་གི་མི (nyi hong gi mi)
- Turkish: Japon (tr)
- Turkmen: ýapon (tk)
- Ukrainian: япо́нець (uk) m (japónecʹ), япо́нка f (japónka)
- Urdu: جاپانی (jāpānī)
- Uyghur: ياپون (yapon)
- Uzbek: yapon (uz)
- Vietnamese: người Nhật
- Volapük: (♂♀) Yapänan (vo), (♂) hi-Yapänan, (♀) ji-Yapänan
- Yaeyama: please add this translation if you can
- Yiddish: יאַפּאַנער m (yapaner)
- Yonaguni: please add this translation if you can
Japanese
- A language that is primarily spoken in East Asia and is the official language of Japan.
I’ve been studying Japanese for three years, and I still can’t order pizza in Tokyo!
Japanese language
- Afrikaans: Japannees (af)
- Ainu: シサㇺ イタㇰ (sisam itak)
- Albanian: gjuha japoneze
- Arabic: اَلْيَابَانِيَّة f (al-yābāniyya), يَابَانِيّ m (yābāniyy), يَابَانِيَّة (ar) (yābāniyya)
- Armenian: ճապոներեն (hy) (čaponeren)
- Asturian: xaponés (ast)
- Azerbaijani: Yapon dili (az)
- Banjarese: bahasa Japang
- Basque: japoniera (eu)
- Belarusian: япо́нская мо́ва f (japónskaja móva), япо́нская f (japónskaja)
- Bengali: জাপানি ভাষা (bn) f (japani bhaśa), জাপানি (bn) (japani)
- Bulgarian: япо́нски m (japónski) (ези́к)
- Catalan: japonès (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 日本話 / 日本话 (jat6 bun2 waa6-2), 日文 (jat6 man4-2), 和文 (wo4 man4) (written)
- Eastern Min: 日本話 / 日本话 (Nĭk-buōng-uâ), 日本語 / 日本语 (Nĭk-buōng-ngṳ̄), 日語 / 日语 (Nĭk-ngṳ̄)
- Hokkien: 日本語 / 日本语 (zh-min-nan) (Ji̍t-pún-oē)
- Mandarin: (spoken language) 日語 / 日语 (zh) (Rìyǔ), (written language) 日文 (zh) (Rìwén), (rare) 日本話 / 日本话 (zh) (Rìběnhuà), (rare) 日本語 / 日本语 (zh) (Rìběnyǔ), (rare) 日本文 (Rìběnwén)
- Cornish: Nihonek m, Japanek m
- Czech: japonština (cs) f
- Danish: japansk
- Dutch: Japans (nl)
- Esperanto: japana lingvo
- Estonian: jaapani keel
- Farefare: zappannɛ
- Faroese: japanskt n (adjective)
- Finnish: japani (fi), japanin kieli
- French: japonais (fr) m
- Galician: xaponés (gl) m
- Georgian: იაპონური ენა (iaṗonuri ena), იაპონური (ka) (iaṗonuri) (ენა)
- German: Japanisch (de) n
- Greek: ιαπωνικά (el) n pl (iaponiká)
- Guaraní: hapõñe'ẽ
- Gujarati: જાપાની ભાષા f (jāpānī bhāṣā)
- Hawaiian: ʻŌlelo Iāpana
- Hebrew: יָפָּנִית (he) f (yapanit)
- Hindi: जापानी (hi) f (jāpānī), जापानी भाषा f (jāpānī bhāṣā)
- Hungarian: japán (hu)
- Icelandic: japanska (is) f
- Indonesian: bahasa Jepang
- Interlingua: japonese (ia)
- Irish: Seapáinis f
- Italian: giapponese (it) m
- Japanese: 日本語 (ja) (nihongo), ジャパニーズ (ja) (Japanīzu) (colloquial)
- Javanese: basa Jepang
- Kazakh: жапон тілі (japon tılı), жапонша (japonşa)
- Khmer: ភាសាជប៉ុន (phiəsaa cĕəʾpon)
- Korean: 일본어(日本語) (ko) (Ilboneo), 일어(日語) (ko) (Ireo), 일본말 (Ilbonmal)
- Kyrgyz: жапон тили (japon tili)
- Lao: ພາສາຍີ່ປຸ່ນ (phā sānyī pun)
- Latin: lingua Japonica f, lingua Iaponica f
- Latvian: japāņu valoda f
- Lithuanian: japonų kalba (lt) f
- Luxembourgish: Japanesch (lb) n
- Macedonian: јапонски m (japonski) (ја́зик)
- Malay: bahasa Jepun
- Malayalam: ജാപ്പനീസ് (ml) (jāppanīsŭ)
- Manchu: ᡰᡳᠪᡝᠨ
ᡤᡳᠰᡠᠨ (žiben gisun) - Maori: Reo Hapani
- Mapudungun: kapon dungun
- Marathi: जापानी (jāpānī)
- Miyako: 大和口 (Yamatu-futsu)
- Mongolian: япон хэл (japon xel)
- Navajo: Nííhon bizaad, Binááʼádaałtsʼózí dineʼé
- Norwegian:
- Occitan: japonés (oc) m
- Okinawan: 大和口 (Yamatu-guchi)
- Orok: се̄са кэсэни (sēsa kəsəni)
- Persian: ژاپنی (fa) (žâponi), زبان ژاپنی (zabân-e žâponi)
- Polish: (język) japoński (pl) m inan, japońszczyzna (pl) f
- Portuguese: japonês (pt) m
- Romanian: limba japoneză f, japoneză (ro) f
- Romansch: giapunais m
- Russian: япо́нский язы́к (japónskij jazýk), япо́нский (ru) m (japónskij)
- Sardinian: giaponesu m, giapponesu m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ја̀па̄нскӣ m (језик)
- Roman: jàpānskī (sh) m (jezik)
- Sinhalese: ජපන් (si) (japan), ජපන් භාෂාව (japan bhāṣāwa)
- Slovak: japončina (sk) f
- Slovene: japonski (sl) m (jezik), japonščina (sl)
- Southern Altai: јопон тил (ǰopon til)
- Spanish: japonés (es) m, ponja (es) m (Andes)
- Swahili: Kijapani
- Swedish: japanska (sv)
- Tajik: ҷопонӣ (tg) (joponi), забони ҷопонӣ (zabon-i joponi)
- Tamil: ஜப்பானிய மொழி (jappāṉiya moḻi)
- Telugu: జపనీసు (japanīsu)
- Thai: ภาษาญี่ปุ่น (paa-sǎa yîi-bpùn)
- Tigrinya: ጃፓንኛ (ǧapanña)
- Turkish: Japonca (tr)
- Turkmen: ýapon dili
- Ukrainian: японська (uk) f (japonsʹka) (мо́ва)
- Urdu: جاپانی f (jāpānī)
- Uzbek: yapon (uz), yapon tili
- Vietnamese: tiếng Nhật (vi)
- Volapük: Yapänapük (vo)
- Yaeyama: 大和物言 (Yamatu-muni)
- Yiddish: יאַפּאַניש n (yapanish)
- Yonaguni: 大和物言 (Damatun-munui)
- anti-Japanese
- Hall's Japanese honeysuckle
- Japanese amberjack (Seriola quinqueradiata)
- Japanese bear
- Japanese beech
- Japanese black bear
- Japanese Bobtail
- Japanese bunching onion (Allium fistulosum)
- Japanese bush warbler (Horornis diphone)
- Japanese cake
- Japanese chestnut
- Japanese climbing fern
- Japanese clock
- Japanese clover
- Japanese crab
- Japanese deer
- Japanese dogwood
- Japanese dormouse (Glirulus japonicus)
- Japanese earth
- Japanese encephalitis
- Japanese English
- Japanese fever
- Japanese flood fever
- Japanese full stop
- Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus)
- Japanese honeysuckle
- Japanese ivy
- Japanese knotweed (Fallopia japonica)
- Japanese lacquer tree
- Japanese lantern (Alkekengi officinarum, syn. Physalis alkekengi)
- Japanese lilac
- Japanese millet
- Japanese monkey
- Japanese nightingale
- Japanese pear
- Japanese pheasant
- Japanese pine
- Japanese pond smelt
- Japanese river fever
- Japanese rose
- Japanese scallop (Mizuhopecten yessoensis)
- Japanese sea bass
- Japanese sea lion (Zalophus japonicus)
- Japanese slipper
- Japanese smelt
- Japanese spiny lobster
- Japanese spitz
- Japanese stiltgrass
- Japanese studies
- Japanese sumac
- Japanese theorem
- Japanese tree lilac
- Japanese weasel
- Japanese wolf
- Japanese yew (Taxus cuspidata)
- Middle Japanese
- non-Japanese
- Sinico-Japanese
- wapanese
- Japan
- Japanophile
- Nipponize
- Jap
- Wiktionary’s coverage of Japanese terms
- Appendix:Japanese Swadesh list for a Swadesh list of basic vocabulary words in Japanese
- ISO 639-1 code ja, ISO 639-3 code jpn (SIL)
- Ethnologue entry for Japanese, jpn
Japanese
- attributive form of Japanees
Japanese
From Japan + -ese, after the model of earlier Portuguese japonês, New Latin japonensis, etc.
Japanese m (weak, genitive Japanesen, plural Japanesen)
Declension of Japanese [masculine, weak]
- English terms suffixed with -ese
- English terms derived from Portuguese
- English terms derived from New Latin
- English 3-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/iːz
- Rhymes:English/iːz/3 syllables
- English lemmas
- English adjectives
- English uncomparable adjectives
- English terms with usage examples
- English terms with quotations
- English nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English countable nouns
- English nouns with irregular plurals
- English indeclinable nouns
- English ellipses
- English proper nouns
- en:Japanese
- en:Ethnonyms
- en:Japan
- en:Languages
- en:Nationalities
- Afrikaans non-lemma forms
- Afrikaans adjective forms
- Afrikaans noun forms
- German terms suffixed with -ese
- German terms derived from Portuguese
- German terms derived from New Latin
- German lemmas
- German nouns
- German weak nouns
- German masculine nouns
- German terms with obsolete senses
- de:Ethnonyms
- de:Nationalities
- de:Japan