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

Nihongo

Classroom

What is the Kanji for 'Noh chanting' and 'Popular song'? | 謡

If you are wondering what is the Japanese Kanji for 'Noh chanting' and 'Popular song', you've come to the right place!

The Japanese Kanji for 'Noh chanting' and 'Popular song' is 謡.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Noh chanting, Popular song

    Reading

    kunyomiうた

    uta

    うたい

    utai

    onyomiよう

    you

    Parts

    Say

    Radical

    Stroke Count

    16

    JLPT

    N1

    Grade

    7

    Frequency

    1717

    Handwriting

Parts of the Kanji

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

    kanji

    Meaning

    Say

    component

Kanji Related to Through the Part

These 21 kanji contain the part 言 as well.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Measure, Plan

    kanji

    Meaning

    Talk

    kanji

    Meaning

    Language, Word

    kanji

    Meaning

    Read

    kanji

    Meaning

    Record

    kanji

    調

    Meaning

    Investigate, Tune

    kanji

    Meaning

    Entice, Induce

    kanji

    Meaning

    Trust

    kanji

    Meaning

    Theory, Argument

    kanji

    Meaning

    Recognize, Admit

    kanji

    Meaning

    Warn

    kanji

    Meaning

    Evaluate

    kanji

    Meaning

    Visit

    kanji

    Meaning

    Reason, Translation

    kanji

    Meaning

    Constitution

    kanji

    Meaning

    Correct, Revise

    kanji

    Meaning

    Instruct, Admonish

    kanji

    Meaning

    Swear, Vow

    kanji

    Meaning

    Praise, Honor

    kanji

    Meaning

    Abandon, Give up

    kanji

    Meaning

    Who

Kanji Related to Through the Part

These 4 kanji contain the part 爫 as well.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Rock, Shake

    kanji

    Meaning

    Chicken, Hen, Cock

    kanji

    Meaning

    Valley, Ravine

    kanji

    Meaning

    Grab

Learn the Kanji

Let's make sure you fully understand this kanji.

What does 謡 mean?

謡 means 'Noh chanting' and 'Popular song'.

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.