Word
Kana: しゃみせん Romaji: shamisen Level: N1

三味線

Meaning in English

three-stringed Japanese guitar

Stroke order

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Dictionary

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What it means

三味線 (shamisen) means a traditional Japanese plucked instrument with a long neck and three strings, typically played with a large plectrum (bachi); it functions as both a solo instrument and an accompaniment in a variety of Japanese musical contexts and is known for its bright, percussive tone and sliding pitch techniques.

Main meanings

  • A musical genre or repertoire characterized by pieces written specifically for the shamisen.
  • A metonym for a shamisen player or the act of playing the instrument in casual speech.
  • The part or role filled by the shamisen within an ensemble (e.g., rhythmic/accompaniment role versus soloistic role).
  • A cultural signifier in literature and media used to evoke traditional or regional Japanese atmosphere.

How to use it

Used in formal concert settings, traditional theater accompaniment, folk performances and competitive solo styles; contemporary use includes fusion, recordings and education—performances can be highly formal (concert halls, theater) or casual (local festivals, clubs), and learning occurs through private teachers, schools and ensemble practice.

Variants and close terms

  • 三線 (sanshin) — Okinawan three-stringed lute with a snakeskin body.
  • 津軽三味線 (Tsugaru shamisen) — a regional, percussive playing style from Aomori.
  • 三弦 (sangen) — an alternate or archaic term referring to three-stringed instruments.
  • 三弦 (sanxian) — the Chinese three-stringed lute related in form and ancestry.

Composition

  • 三 (san) = "three"; denotes the number of strings.
  • 味 (mi) = "taste" or "flavor"; here used phonetically rather than literally.
  • 線 (sen) = "line" or "string"; indicates a string or thread.
  • The three characters are an ateji assignment: they combine phonetics and loose imagery but do not define playing technique or construction directly.

Etymology

shamisen developed phonologically from Ryukyuan samisen and ultimately traces to the Chinese lute name sanxian, reflecting a chain of borrowings and regular sound changes rather than a native compound coined from Japanese morphemes.

Origin

The instrument became prominent in early modern Japan (Edo period), when it was integrated into urban entertainment culture and theatrical forms; across the 17th–19th centuries it was adopted by professional entertainers and schools, solidifying its role in popular and classical performance traditions.

Word class

noun (名詞)

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