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

Nihongo

Classroom

What is the Kanji for 'Prisoner' and 'Criminal'? | 囚

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

The Japanese Kanji for 'Prisoner' and 'Criminal' is 囚.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Prisoner, Criminal

    Reading

    kunyomiとら

    tora

    onyomiしゅう

    shuu

    Parts

    Person Box

    Radical

    Stroke Count

    5

    JLPT

    N1

    Grade

    9

    Frequency

    1646

    Handwriting

Parts of the Kanji

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

    kanji

    Meaning

    Person

    radical

    Meaning

    Box

Kanji Related to Through the Part

These 19 kanji contain the part 人 as well.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Big

    kanji

    Meaning

    Tree, Wood

    kanji

    Meaning

    Fire

    kanji

    Meaning

    Now

    kanji

    Meaning

    Inside

    kanji

    Meaning

    Valley

    kanji

    Meaning

    Eat, Food

    kanji

    Meaning

    Meat

    kanji

    Meaning

    Tea

    kanji

    Meaning

    Meet

    kanji

    Meaning

    Fit, Match

    kanji

    Meaning

    Graduate

    kanji

    Meaning

    Man, Husband

    kanji

    Meaning

    Decorate

    kanji

    Meaning

    Some, How many

    kanji

    Meaning

    Plan, Project

    kanji

    Meaning

    Mediate, Jammed in

    kanji

    Meaning

    House, Quarters

    kanji

    Meaning

    Umbrella, Parasol

Kanji Related to Through the Part

These 8 kanji contain the part 囗 as well.

    kanji

    Meaning

    Map

    kanji

    Meaning

    Trouble, Distress

    kanji

    Meaning

    Breathe out, Blow

    kanji

    Meaning

    Group, Association

    kanji

    Meaning

    Face, Surface

    kanji

    Meaning

    Hard

    kanji

    Meaning

    Sphere, Range

    kanji

    Meaning

    Recite, Recital

Learn the Kanji

Let's make sure you fully understand this kanji.

What does 囚 mean?

囚 means 'Prisoner' and 'Criminal'.

Japanese school students learn this kanji in Senior 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.