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What is the Kanji for "Free time" and "Spare time"?

If you are wondering what is the Japanese Kanji for "Free time" and "Spare time", you've come to the right place!

The Japanese Kanji for "Free time" and "Spare time" is "".

This kanji has 3 readings:

Its kunyomi readings are "Hima" and "Itoma".

Its onyomi reading is "Ka".

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 2 parts:

The kanji "日" means "Day" and "Sun" and can be read as "Jitsu", "Nichi", "Hi", and "Ka". And The component "叚" .

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

What does the kanji "" mean in japanese?

"" means "Free time" and "Spare time".

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:

: "Free time". The noun '暇 (ひま)' means 'free time'. It refers to the period of time when one is not occupied with work or other obligations, and can use as they please. '暇' can be used to describe having an abundance of unscheduled time, or being idle and without things to do. For example: I have free time today - (今日は暇だ). I'm bored since I have too much free time - (暇すぎてつまらない).

休暇: "Break". The noun '休暇 (きゅうか)' means 'break'. It refers to a period of time off from work or other obligations, such as a vacation or holiday. It can also be used to describe a rest period or intermission. For example: I will take a break next week - (来週、休暇を取ります). She is on vacation this month - (彼女は今月休暇中です).

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 "ひ" is read as "hi". The hiragana "ま" is read as "ma". The hiragana "い" is read as "i". And The hiragana "と" is read as "to".

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.