Learn Japanese while reading Manga with our new Manga Reader Tool!

Nihongo

Classroom

What is the Kanji for 'Branch' and 'Fork'? | 岐

If you are wondering what is the Japanese Kanji for 'Branch' and 'Fork', you've come to the right place!

The Japanese Kanji for 'Branch' and 'Fork' is 岐.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Branch, Fork

    Reading

    onyomi

    ki

    Parts

    Mountain Branch, Support

    Radical

    Stroke Count

    7

    JLPT

    N1

    Grade

    8

    Frequency

    1683

    Handwriting

Parts of the Kanji

If you visually break down this kanji, you can see it is made up of 2 parts:

    kanji

    Meaning

    Mountain

    kanji

    Meaning

    Branch, Support

Kanji Related to Through the Part

These 21 kanji contain the part 山 as well.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Exit

    kanji

    Meaning

    Boulder

    kanji

    Meaning

    Island

    kanji

    Meaning

    Both

    kanji

    Meaning

    Beach

    kanji

    Meaning

    Charcoal

    kanji

    Meaning

    Secret, Dense

    kanji

    Meaning

    Levy, Symptom

    kanji

    Meaning

    Steep

    kanji

    Meaning

    Gorge, Ravine

    kanji

    Meaning

    Collapse, Crumble

    kanji

    Meaning

    Adore, Reverence

    kanji

    Meaning

    High mountain, Peak

    kanji

    Meaning

    Faint, Seclude

    kanji

    Meaning

    Cape, Promontory

    kanji

    Meaning

    Mountain peak, Mountain pass

    kanji

    Meaning

    Peak, Summit

    kanji

    Meaning

    Hermit

    kanji

    Meaning

    Hill

    kanji

    Meaning

    Storm

    kanji

    Meaning

    Cliff

Kanji Related to Through the Part

These 5 kanji contain the part 支 as well.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Skill

    kanji

    Meaning

    Branch

    kanji

    Meaning

    Limb, Arms & legs

    kanji

    Meaning

    Drum

    kanji

    Meaning

    Deed

Learn the Kanji

Let's make sure you fully understand this kanji.

What does 岐 mean?

岐 means 'Branch' and 'Fork'.

Japanese school students learn this kanji in Junior Highschool, while non-native learners often study it for the JLPT N1 exam.

To help you master this kanji, here's an interactive lesson where you'll practice its readings and meanings.