Word
Kana: てん Romaji: ten Level: N1

Meaning in English

heaven, sky

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Dictionary

Word context

What it means

天 means 'heaven' or 'sky'. It designates the upper expanse above the earth and the abstract idea of a heavenly realm or the heavens as a conceptual category in Japanese language and thought.

Main meanings

  • 1. Marker in meteorological and environmental vocabulary indicating atmospheric conditions or the state of the sky.
  • 2. Concept of divine authority or fate used in religious and historical discourse.
  • 3. Element in compounds that conveys superiority, exalted status, or naturalness.
  • 4. Term used in astronomy and cosmology contexts to refer to celestial phenomena and the heavens.

How to use it

Used across registers: the on'yomi appears in Sino-Japanese compounds and technical terms, the kun'yomi appears in standalone words and some names; it appears in formal religious and historical language, in everyday compounds related to weather and the sky, and as a bound morpheme in colloquial and literary expressions.

Variants and close terms

  • 空 (そら, sora) — sky
  • 宙 (ちゅう, chuu) — space/firmament
  • 天国 (てんごく, tengoku) — paradise/heaven
  • 地 (ち, chi) — earth (antonym)

Composition

The character is historically a pictographic/ideographic form: a horizontal stroke above a larger element (often interpreted as a stylized representation of a person or the character 大), visually suggesting the idea of the sky or a realm above people; the structure emphasizes an upper element over a larger base to convey ‘above’ or ‘heaven’.

Etymology

天 entered Japanese with two reading strands: on'yomi ten derived from Middle Chinese pronunciations and kun'yomi ame/ama reflecting an indigenous Japanese word; the on reading came via Sino-Japanese borrowings while the kun reading represents native phonetic evolution.

Origin

The concept and character arrived with Chinese writing in early medieval Japan and became embedded in literature, religious texts, and governance; over centuries it acquired roles in Shinto and Buddhist discourse and in political language such as the imperial title that frames rulership in relation to the heavens.

Word class

noun (名詞); kanji/character used as noun and bound morpheme (接頭辞)

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