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What is the Kanji for "Break", "Ruin", and "Destroy"?

If you are wondering what is the Japanese Kanji for "Break", "Ruin", and "Destroy", you've come to the right place!

The Japanese Kanji for "Break", "Ruin", and "Destroy" is "".

This kanji has 2 readings:

Its kunyomi reading is "Kowa".

Its onyomi reading is "Kai".

kunyomi readings are based on the pronunciation of native Japanese words, and onyomi readings are based on the Chinese pronunciation of the character.

If you visually breakdown this kanji, you can see is made up of 4 parts:

The kanji "土" means "Soil" and can be read as "Tsuchi", "To", and "Do". The kanji "十" means "Ten" and can be read as "Juu" and "Too". The radical "罒" means "Net" . And The kanji "衣" means "Clothes" and can be read as "I" and "Koromo".

Now, let's make sure you understand this kanji the other way around too.

What does the kanji "" mean in japanese?

"" means "Break", "Ruin", and "Destroy".

Japanese School Students learn this kanji in Junior Highschool, while foreigners may learn this kanji in preparation for the JLPT N1 exam.

Here are some words that use this kanji:

崩壊: "Collapse". The Japanese noun '崩壊 (ほうかい)' means 'collapse'. It refers to the complete breakdown or failure of a system, structure, or organization. This word is often used to describe the sudden and catastrophic fall of something, such as the collapse of a building, the collapse of a government, or the collapse of a person's health. For example: The bridge collapsed - (橋が崩壊した). The economy collapsed - (経済が崩壊した).

壊れる: "Break". The Japanese verb '壊れる (こわれる)' means 'to break'. This verb is used to describe when an object or thing becomes damaged or stops functioning properly. It can be used for both physical objects, like a vase breaking, or non-physical things, like a computer program crashing. For example: My computer broke - (私のコンピューターが壊れた). The glass vase broke - (ガラスの花瓶が壊れた).

壊す: "Break". The Japanese verb '壊す (こわす)' means 'to break'. This verb is used to describe the action of damaging or destroying an object, either intentionally or accidentally. It can be used with a wide variety of objects, from physical items to more abstract concepts. For example: I broke the vase - (私はコップを壊した). The window was broken - (窓が壊れていた)

破壊: "Destruction". The Japanese verbal noun '破壊 (はかい)' means 'destruction'. It refers to the act of destroying or demolishing something, whether it be a physical object, a structure, or an idea. This word is often used to describe the violent or forceful dismantling of something. For example: The earthquake caused widespread destruction - (地震により、広範囲な破壊が起きた). The invading army destroyed the city - (侵略軍が街を破壊した).

To make really sure you learn this Kanji, I've prepared an interactive lesson for you. You are going to learn the readings and meanings of this kanji.

But first, you need to know a little bit about Hiragana and Katakana.

Hiragana and katakana are japanese syllabaries, this means that each character represents a syllable.

This are the characters you need to know for this lesson:

The hiragana "か" is read as "ka". The hiragana "い" is read as "i". The hiragana "こ" is read as "ko". And The hiragana "わ" is read as "wa".

Heres a quick tutorial on how to use it. You'll be asked three type of questions: meaning, reading, and writing.

For meanings questions all you have to do is type the english meaning. If there is more than one meaning, you have to include them all in your answer separating them by commas (,).

For Reading questions you have to type the reading in romaji (roman letters, our normal alphabet) and it'll be automatically converted to hiragana if necessary. If there is more than one reading, you have to include them all in your answer separating them by commas (,).

For Writing questions some options will appear and all you have to do is select the correct ones.