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Minna no Nihongo II (Wake Sensei class) > Lesson 37-38 Kanji (writing)
Minna no Nihongo II
Wake-Sensei's J 322 class at USAFA
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Kunyomi: (none)
Onyomi: ハツ, ホツ
Stroke count: 9
Radical name: はつがしら
Radical
departure, discharge, publish, emit, start from, disclose, counter for gunshots
Mnemonics
The sound of
footsteps
was made by
two
legs
departing.
Written by: gillianfaith
Show all mnemonics (20)
I departed from
tent
with my
two
legs
Written by: イチゴーちゃん
I departured my
tent
,
ran
as fast as I could. Because I counted
two
gunshots. HATSUuuu, HATSUuuu as the bullets past me.
Written by: ジェン~1984
This tent looks like a HAT {ハツ}. While inside the
hat tent
I heard
two
gunshots and departed asap with my
legs
Written by: Plum Blossom
The owner of the
tent
and
lantern
is departing with a daiHATSU {はつ}
Written by: Justps2
I departed from my
dotted tent
with my own
two
legs
, but forgot my HATSU {はつ}.
Written by: BambiIcedTea
Don't forget your
ハツ
before you depart with those
two
legs
of yours.
Written by: ヘッジ
Via :
Two feet
/ハツ make a departure from the point of
origin
. We must disclose that the legs
start from higher up than normal and cross the centerline in order to emit a discharge used as a counter for gunshots
is the radical of .
く/あばく expose, uncover, open
つ/たつ  sever, cut off, separate
つ/はなつ emit, send out, loose
く/ひらく open up, unfold, open
You put on your
hat
before you depart.
Written by: Valkerai
A
hand is shooting arrows from a bow
. The arrows "
depart
"
the bow or are "emitted" from the bow.

*better noticable in the nonabbreviated variant*
Written by: ききな
Once you remove the
lantern
from the
tent
, we will be ready for departure. We can’t leave the lantern inside of the tent; that’s a fire hazard. We’d best take it with us before the departure. Don’t you agree?
Written by: しまうま
I departed as fast as my
two
legs
could take me as soon as the sky emitted the first signs of electric discharge: it started from far away, but the
lightning
was about to strike my
tent
!
Written by: マリナ ❊
Yokai
Tent
with
2
Legs
DEPARTS after hearing GUNSHOTS
Written by: ハンゾウ
When the man in the top hat はつ with the
two
long and crooked
legs
appears in your
tent
, you'd better depart immediately!
Written by: darrenburns
Footsteps
are HOT {ハツ} on their trail of
departure
; HOT {ハツ} off the press of publication.
Written by: マイケルミラー
Hannah はな
you
are being discharged from the hospital today. Don’t depart without your
top た hat ハツ
and your
cane
. I don’t want to have to call you おこる back あばく.
Written by: Jules.33
Just as we were about to depart, I saw
two
legs
poking out from under a
tent
, then a loud HATSU {ハツ} came out.
Written by: バリエル
two
people departed from the
tent
using their
legs
to walk out
Written by: weirdkeichan
ハツ's
decorative roof
ing business has just launched. They are finally
open
for business.
Written by: チェイスです
achoo!
ハツ
sneezed "Tatsu
ni
ru"
before
departing
into the dusty wind
Whilst I depart from my vacation, I saw
two
pair of
legs
uncovered by a patched up
tent
.
Written by: ウインク
Related vocabulary
see all words
/ はつおん - (noun/する verb) pronunciation; production of sound
/ ばくはつ - (noun/する verb) explosion, detonation, blast, blowing up, eruption; outburst (of emotion), explosion (e.g. of anger), eruption (e.g. of discontent)
/ ほつぼだいしん - (noun) {Buddh} {yoji} deciding to embrace Buddhism, deciding to seek enlightenment, seeking to have religious awakening
/ ほつがん - (noun/transitive,intransitive) {Buddh} giving rise to the desire to save all sentient beings; praying, prayer
/ はつめい - (noun/する verb) invention; {adj-na} {dated} intelligent, clever, smart
Kunyomi: (none)
Onyomi: , コウ
Stroke count: 3
Radical name: え,たくみ
Radical
craft, construction, katakana e radical (no. 48)
Mnemonics
This kanji looks like the cross-section of a
girder
, which is used in construction.
Written by: gillianfaith
Show all mnemonics (11)
COnstruction {コウ}
girders
can be purchased with a COUpon {ク}.

Credit: gillianfaith for the girder suggestion
Written by: Catalyst314
Depicts a carpenter’s rule, showing
end marks
and a straight
edge
|
. A carpenter たくみ needs it to practice their craft when they do construction.

is not the source of katakana エ, which comes instead from , nevertheless, is known as the エ radical because of its shape.

(*koːŋ)
ク, コウ← /kuŋ/ ← *koːŋ
The contractor needs
I-beams
to practice his *craft*. Without them, *construction* would "come"「KŌ コウ」to a halt, and he couldn't "recoup"「KU ク」his losses.
This is an
iron beam
for construction.
Written by: AidanRyota
コウ is part of the construction team making the
railroad
.
Written by: チェイスです
In a construction, there is no magical craft. A simple
wall
can be built on the
ground
and it will support the
roof
.
Written by: Sadaharu_3
Looks like the 'face' side of a
metal beam
used the carefully-planned craft of construction.
Written by:
COAl {こう} was used in
construction
in the past.
Written by: BambiIcedTea
I know a KU/cool guy who worked in KOU/construction.
Written by: レイん|レナ
I know a coo-l /コウ/ guy who worked in construction. In the construction industry they use these big steel
girder
s
to put together buildings.
Written by: *Anna*
The craft
beer selection at the COOP コウsupermarket is irresistible to me.
Related vocabulary
see all words
/ だいく - (noun) carpenter
/ くふう - (noun/する verb) devising (a way), contriving, inventing, thinking up, figuring out, coming up with, working out; device, design, idea, plan, invention; dedication to spiritual improvement (esp. through Zen meditation)
/ こうぎょう - (noun) (manufacturing) industry
/ じんこう - (noun) artificial, man-made, human work, human skill, artificiality
/ こうじ - (noun/する verb) construction work
Kunyomi: めし
Onyomi: ハン
Stroke count: 12
Radical name: しょくへん
Radical
meal, boiled rice
Mnemonics
If you
eat
this meal you will be
anti
hungry.
Written by: espiacent
Show all mnemonics (21)
Rice as
food
is the
anti
dote to hunger.
Written by: ソフィア..
Whenever I
eat
a tasty meal/gohan {ハン}, it's hard
not
to be messy {めし}.
Written by: quickMaffs44
Food
is shared with
friends
as meal.
Written by: eksvie
For tonight's meal, we'll be
eating
wild goose
again
.
Written by: クリスピー
The "handsome"「HAN ハン」man
eats
a "messy"「MESHI めし」*meal* of *boiled rice* with
chopsticks
under the
canopy
outside his favorite
restaurant
.
Once
again
, I am
eating
a meal under someone else's
roof
Written by: Quixotic
I'm not
against
eating
boiled rice with my HANds {ハン} if it's prepared as onigiri, but if it's just rice in a bowl... well, that would be messy. {めし}
'Han' Solo said... If you
eat
this 'messy' meal you will be
anti
rice
Written by: Samurai_Ash
Food
+
against
means rice because rice is the base you eat all your other food against.
Written by: Emmyちゅ
ハン solo is
against
eating
rice. He doesn't like the taste.
Written by: チェイスです
Every day in May, she めし
ate
a meal of
wild goose
again and again
. She hun-ted ハン them herself.
Written by: Wolfenspace
I am once
again
under a
cliff
eating
a meal of boiled rice.
Written by: マリナ ❊
If you
eat
a MESH {めし} of boiled rice for a meal, you will be
anti
HANgry {はん}.
Written by: BambiIcedTea
If you're HANgry
eat
this meal of boiled rice/MESHI
against
your hunger.
Written by: レイん|レナ
The nicer a meal looks, the more likely one is to be
anti-
eat
about it. They’d rather sit and snap classy photos of their meal than eat it!
Written by: しまうま
Friends
don’t care if you’re messy めし when you
eat
your meal/rice but please wash your hands ハン.
Written by: Jules.33
The
opposition
eats
rice to become stronger.
Written by: 50・fuyuko50
You
turnover/anti
your
food
to make it a meal - fluffing rice after boiling it
Written by: Ciboxd
The meal is messy to
eat
with a
wild goose
on your other
hand
.
Written by: moolsu
It may be MESHI {messy} but
eating
meat that’s been tenderized by a
hammer
again and
again
makes for a tastier meal.
I hate boiled rice! It's the
opposite
of good
food
Written by: StoneCuber
Related vocabulary
see all words
/ ゆうめし - (noun) evening meal, dinner, supper
/ めし - (noun) {male} cooked rice; {male} meal, food; {male} one's living, livelihood
/ ごはん - (noun) cooked rice; meal
/ ばんごはん - (noun) dinner, evening meal
/ すいはんき - (noun) rice cooker
Kunyomi: (none)
Onyomi: タイ, ダイ
Stroke count: 5
Radical name: くち
Radical
pedestal, a stand, counter for machines and vehicles
Mnemonics
I'm
standing tall on a
box
which I used a pedestal.
Written by: タイムルート
Show all mnemonics (15)
Via : Originally a
speaking
mouth
, by extension, a platform or pedestal for speaking. Also used as a counter for machines and vehicles, basically anything that can be used as a speaking platform. is the radical, because speaking is something done with the mouth.

This is a productive character with many derivatives and variants, including tower
/タイ, ダイ; typhoon
/タイ; desk
/タイ; enjoy
/イ; and begin
/シ. When used as a phonological component, it is read タイ in 紿; シ in ; and イ in . The イ series is actually not simplified from , but derives instead from =/イ plus semantic . Confusingly, most of these are now pronounced タイ.

(*l̥ʰɯː, *l'ɯː, *lɯː, *lɯ) 紿
タイ← /tʰɑ̆i/ ←*l̥ʰɯː, *l'ɯː
イ← /i/ ← *lɯː, *lɯ
I
will ダイ standing on this pedestal using my
mouth
to count machines and vehicles
Written by: Omoide
たい
said
"There are too many cars.
I
can't count them."
Written by: チェイスです
At the concert,
I
step up onto the "dais"「DAI ダイ」in front of the music *stand*. I say, ""you tenors"「UTENA うてな」sing loud and clear!" They look at me on the
*pedestal*
with hostility on their faces. They hate being *counted as machines* instead of singers!
I have my
private
box
to stand on. I call it my pedestal. I would die だい for my box
Written by: Menhit
Ideogram: Originally meant speak as in
I
speak
or to be happy, however many other etymologies converge in this character like :
platform
tree name, table
typhoon

Japanese borrows the first in a sense meaning pedestal.

As a Phonetic Bushu: タイ、ダイ、イ、チ、シ.
This is due to the multiple etymologies.
Written by: フバフバ
A DAIs is a type of pedestal, or
box
. If you place equipment that you can use
yourself
on them, you can count your machines/vehicles by counting the daises.
Written by: Ontama-chan
It looks like a
foot
being placed on a
pedestal or a stand
.
Written by: カミCamooh
Katakana mu
is standing on a
platform
.
Written by: AidanRyota
I like to think of this kanji as the gesture of
putting something in my mouth
, to represent the kitchen table and by extension, other table-like pieces of furniture, and other large practical objects.
Written by: Biev
I
closed my
mouth
and put an offering on a THAI {タイ} pedestal.
Written by: バリエル
You
arm
wrestle on a pedastle
Written by: WhoIsRem?
During the
I go to my
and as a PEDESTAL to stand on I use a stable
BOX
while spreading my
ELBOWS
in to the doorframe.
Written by: Abnormalise
Looks like a
podium
or like a
pedestal
with
a stand
on top.
Written by:
This
character
is your elbow and hand, portraying a person standing on the
stage
. Later used as the counter for big things that people used or ride on, like machines, vehicles, and stages as well!
Written by: non0230
Related vocabulary
see all words
/ たいふう - (noun) typhoon, hurricane
/ ぶたい - (noun) stage (of a theatre, concert hall, etc.), (stage) performance; setting (of a story), scene; sphere (of activity), stage (e.g. political stage), scene, arena, world
/ だいどころ - (noun) kitchen; financial situation
/ とうだい - (noun) lighthouse; old-fashioned interior light fixture comprising a wooden pole with an oil-filled dish and a wick atop it
/ たいわん - (noun) Taiwan
Kunyomi: (none)
Onyomi: ダイ
Stroke count: 18
Radical name: おおがい
Radical
topic, subject
Mnemonics
Yester
day
, I wrote the subject of the article at the
head
of the
page
.
Written by: イマンちゃん。
Show all mnemonics (22)
On this
day
, my goal for my report is to write the main topic at the
head
of the
page
. Or I will DAI {ダイ} trying.
Written by: quickMaffs44
this
page
contains the subject.
Written by: ドみにく
On
sun
DAY {だい}, I wrote the topic of the article at the
head
of the
page
.
Written by: BambiIcedTea
Make sure to put your topic on the
correct
/ゼ← *djeʔ … *deː →ダイ
page
of your thesis. Note that これ is the phonetic component and written first; おおがい is the radical and written last.
The original meaning was forehead, the “just so”
part of the “head”
.
/ひたい forehead, brow
My glance
runs
down the
page
to learn the topic of the
day
.
Written by:
I imagine this as:
window with Sun
,
Table
and
Page
with the TOPIC for homework.
Written by: ハンゾウ
The big/DAI topic/subject of the
day
is
walking
to
see
the
leaves
.
Written by: レイん|レナ
The other
day
, I selected a *topic* for an article that would appear at the
head
of the front
page
of the newspaper, but my editor said it was no good. I was so embarrassed that I nearly "died"「DAI ダイ」!
The first recorded topic is
justice
on a
page
.
Written by: アフマヂ
Phono-Semantic: Phonetic
and semantic
originally meaning head.

The topic is usually written at the head of a
page
any teacher will say that is what is
just
Written by: フバフバ
The topic is on the
right
side of the
page
.
Written by: Lucius Fox
Each
day
, the TOPIC of a
page
is a tally count of the farm
animals
.
Written by: コレット
Check out this{だい}diagram. If you use the
sun
, you can find the
correct
geoduck
. That's the topic of today's lecture.
Written by: しまうま
The subject of this
day
is the topic seen at the
head
of the
page
.
Written by: ゼンレル
Correct
page
requires a subject line.
Written by: JP_Learner_114
Everything feels
right
when the
Sun
shines on all creation's
head
, turning the
page
to a new DAY {ダイ}, leading to a new subject
Written by: バリエル
before you are going
to
eat
shellfish
take
one
minute to ask each
person
about their allergies so you don't have to take someone
to
the hospital and worry every
day
Written by: weirdkeichan
I have written the subject on
this
page
.
Written by: Veerdb
Just so
the
day
progressed, the teacher
“TO-ld
us to
look
at the
8
topics, my
head
wasn’t prepared for all the work.
ダイ believes
Justice
is a complex topic that could fill many
pages
.
Written by: チェイスです
The
day
when he bent his
head
over the
page
was the day when he learnt the topic.
Written by: LilyJ
To pursue this topic, we must be on
this
same
page
.
Written by: スタチク
Related vocabulary
see all words
/ もんだい - (noun) question (e.g. on a test), problem; problem (e.g. societal, political), question, issue, subject (e.g. of research), case, matter; question (i.e. doubt); public discussion, controversy; trouble, problem, inconvenience, difficulty
宿 / しゅくだい - (noun) homework, assignment; pending issue, unresolved problem, open question
/ わだい - (noun) topic, subject; {adj-no} much talked about, topical, in the news, hot
/ だい - (noun/する verb) title, subject, theme, topic; problem (on a test), question; {n-suf} {ctr} counter for questions (on a test)
/ だいめい - (noun) title, caption, heading
Kunyomi: ま.つ
Onyomi: タイ
Stroke count: 9
Radical name: ぎょうにんべん
Radical
wait, depend on
Mnemonics
The
man stopped
*before* the
temple
is waiting.
Written by: lightmotif
Show all mnemonics (19)
The man
loiter
ing
in front of the
temple
adjusting his TAI is probably waiting for someone
Written by: Seraseth
A
person stops
and waits in front of the
temple
. They pull out some mats {ま(つ)} and start doing some tai-chi {タイ}.
Written by: quickMaffs44
Wait! You must まつ
stop
and un-tie タイ your shoes before entering the
temple
.
Written by: Wolfenspace
To wait
means to
stop
for some TIme
{タイ}, to put on hold
until another MATter {ま.つ} happens.
Written by: ヒァン
I wait on the
steps
of the
temple
Written by: Veerdb
If you wait patiently outside a
temple
you might be able to see the
leader
. How do you know they're the leader of the temple? Easy. They wear a long
hat
.
. And they do TAI-chi { タイ} outside the temple, with your {ま}.
Written by: Plum Blossom
She had to *wait* to visit the
temple
in "Thailand"「TAI タイ」. Her
travel
plans *depended on* the dates of the upcoming "festival = まつり"「MATSU ま.つ」.
A short
step
bring me in front of a THAI {タイ}
temple
, where the
ground
measurement
depend on how long I can wait the MOST {ま.つ}
Written by: バリエル
Left side is
linger/step/movement radical
and right side is used in a lot of
measurement
related kanji. Measuring lingering is how much {TAI}me you wait. Often on a door mat {matsu}
Written by: SaltyCogs
When you
go
to the
temple
to worship, you have to wait in line.
Written by: 50・fuyuko50
You can’t just
step
into a
Buddhist temple
, you have to wait to be let in.
Written by: Biev
The army is waiting for their commander to finish his business on the
road
in front of the
temple
.
Written by: non0230
Looks like
a guy
leaning on the outside of
a building
to wait for someone he depends on to come out.
Written by:
TAIme to wait/matsu at the
temple
before we
go
Written by: レイん|レナ
Looks kind of like a mash-up 「ま」of the kanjis in
rest
and
time
. To wait means it is time 「タイ」 to rest.
Written by: Jules.33
When the person
stepped
in front of the
temple
, they waited a moment, admiring the site.
Stop
and wait,
etc.
/トウ→タイ.
Some
people
depend on religion to believe that they will MATSU TAI - not die. They will wait outside the
temple
all day.
Stopping
time
>
is to wait
Written by: Quixotic
Related vocabulary
see all words
わせる / まちあわせる - (Ichidan verb (ます = stem+ます)) to rendezvous, to meet at a prearranged place and time, to arrange to meet
わせ / まちあわせ - (noun) appointment
/ きたい - (noun/する verb) expectation, anticipation, hope; {adj-no} promising, rising, up-and-coming
/ しょうたい - (noun/する verb) invitation
つ / まつ - (Godan verb - つ/transitive,intransitive) to wait; to await, to look forward to, to anticipate; to depend on, to need (usu. in negative form)
Kunyomi: こめ
Onyomi: ベイ, マイ
Stroke count: 6
Radical name: こめ
Radical
rice, USA, metre
Mnemonics
Isn't it ironic that the kanji for
USA
and
meter
are the same? While YOu'RE using imperial which in MAI opinion has beKOME outdated. BEIng so old and hard to calculate with.
Written by: ジェン~1984
Show all mnemonics (6)
This
tree
has
rice
just shooting out of it!
Written by: マイコー
"My"「MAI マイ」family has a square "deco*meter*"「KOME こめ」of land near a "bay"「BĒ ベイ」in the *USA* where they
grow
their own
*rice*
.
Etymology:
Originally looked like a
stem
with three
rice kernels
on either side, which then
got partially connected
.
If you line up grains of RICE for
1
0 million METRES, you’ll eventually reach the USA, whose flag is made of
stars
and
stripes
Written by: Ginnythesquid
Rice plants have
lots
of
kernels
.

(*miːʔ)
ベイ, マイ← /mieiᵡ/ ← *miːʔ
If you
split
a
tree
, you get rice.
Written by: Rilain
Related vocabulary
see all words
/ こめ - (noun) (husked grains of) rice; staple (product, etc.), necessity; {net-sl} (online) comment
/ おうべい - (noun) Europe and America, the West
/ しんまい - (noun) new rice, first rice crop of the year; novice, beginner, newcomer, new hand
/ なんべい - (noun) South America
/ ちゅうなんべい - (noun) Central and South America
Kunyomi: むら
Onyomi: ソン
Stroke count: 7
Radical name: きへん
Radical
village, town
Mnemonics
The village in the
woods
is
small
Written by: Hexador
Show all mnemonics (13)
I sent my SON/son to the village
tree
to take a
measurement
.
Written by: chancetenacity
You need to
measure
a lot of
wood
to build a village.
Written by: gillianfaith
My son {ソン} and I are ecologists in a small village. We make "moolah"/money {むら} by investigating
trees
and taking
small measurements
of them.
Written by: quickMaffs44
When my SON revealed his MURAl he made on the town wall, the villagers started throwing
wooden
sticks
at him.
Written by: ジェン~1984
The village was hacked out from the
trees
, inch by
inch
/スン→ソン.
That village is famous for
measuring
wood
.
Written by:
The size of a VILLAGE is
MEASURED
by its
TREES
.
Written by: Abnormalise
Phono-semantic: Phonetic
“ソン” Semantic
“wood”.

Villages are usually
wooden
and
measured
crudely.
Written by: フバフバ
Someone’s taking
measurements
of the
trees
… Why, though? These people are planning to take the trees and cut them down to make their village.
Written by: しまうま
Villages are very close,
shaku/10
, to the
woods
.
Written by: コエル
The village is surrounded by
trees
glued
together.
Written by: ひでのり
People in the village need to work together to plant
trees
in the village. Use
for
the action of the hand planting the tree
.
Written by: non0230
Among the trees
there is a small
village.
Written by: Vazev
Related vocabulary
see all words
/ むら - (noun) village
/ むらびと - (noun) villager
/ のうそん - (noun) agricultural community, farm village; {adj-no} rural
/ ぎょそん - (noun) fishing village
/ さんそん - (noun) mountain village
Kunyomi: そそ.ぐ
Onyomi: チュウ
Stroke count: 8
Radical name: さんずい
Radical
pour, irrigate, shed (tears), flow into, concentrate on, notes, comment, annotate
Mnemonics
Whatever the
chief
was chewing {チュウ} on was so so good {そそぐ} that
tears
were pouring down his face.
Written by: Anonymous123
Show all mnemonics (18)
My job is to pour
water
for the
master
.
Written by: マイコー
Water
pours in from all sides to flow into the central /チュウ reservoir, which is the
main thing
/シュ→チュウ used to irrigate the crops.
The meaning concentrate on comes from an analogy comparing attention to water: you pour it into whatever main thing you need to focus on.
The meanings notes, comment and annotate are from “to explain in detail,” which is no longer used.
The
village chief
ordered the construction of
water
channels to irrigate the fields.
Written by: FuzzyPlatypus
Looks like a field missing
two sides
from where the irrigation broke and so much
water
flowed into the field, that it overflowed, and poured out. Take notes on my comment, and concentrate on this, so it never happens again.
Written by:
Water
my
lord
? Quick, pour it while he's 'chewing' / チュウ gum
Written by: Samurai_Ash
A rat CHEWed {ちゅう} the jug, so when I poured a glass of
water
for my
master
he got all SOGGY {そそぐ}!
Written by: BambiIcedTea
to pour
water
from
high place
Written by:
A
storm
master
can pour water whenever and wherever they like
Written by: Seraseth
Pour some
water
for
master
チュウ
Written by: チェイスです
You can imagine this as a
cup
, with
drops
of
water
pouring out of it
Written by: Hrumm
In ancient times, only rich
lords
were able to irrigate
water
to their homes.
Written by: Vilija
It's a
water
fountain
, you can even see the
splashes on top
. You can use the water to irrigate nearby plants, careful about the pollen or you'll sneeze: aCHUU!
Written by: エドアード
The
main thing
to use
water
for is to irrigate crops, or you could pour some to flow into the soil.
Written by: ビモ!
The
king
lives on The Nile where the
water
over flows onto the banks each year and irrigates the fields.
Written by: Jules.33
Pour
water
to {チュウ} your
lord
Written by: Bruiserzinha
The
Lord
had issues chewing チュウ his gum due to a lack of saliva, so I poured some
water
directly in his mouth.
He said "Souuu souuu そそ, just like that"
Written by: ケンパチ
Be careful !! The
king
is going to get hit by
arrows!!
Written by: Lucirie
She
should not comment so rudely about her
master
.
Written by:
Related vocabulary
see all words
む / そそぎこむ - (Godan verb - む/transitive) to pour in (liquids); to pour in (money), to pump in (investment)
れる / そそぎいれる - (Ichidan verb (ます = stem+ます)) to pour into
/ ちゅうしゃ - (noun/する verb) injection, jab, shot
/ ちゅうい - (noun/する verb) attention, notice, heed; care, caution, precaution, looking out (for), watching out (for); advice, warning, caution, reminder; admonishment, reprimand, telling-off
/ ちゅう - (noun/する verb) annotation, explanatory note, comment
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