Word
Kana: しま Romaji: shima Level: N4

Meaning in English

island

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Illustrated Dictionary
島 - Illustrated Dictionary
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What it means

What does 島 (shima) mean? 島 (shima) refers to an island: a distinct piece of land surrounded by water used in everyday Japanese to name geographic features, refer to inhabited or uninhabited islets, and identify island-based communities or territories.

Main meanings

  • 1. Used as a place-name element with alternating readings (often -shima or -jima) to form the names of specific islands and island groups.
  • 2. Can imply a small or minor landform (islet) when contrasted with larger landmasses or archipelagos.
  • 3. Employed metaphorically to describe isolation or separateness, as in describing an isolated person, group, or system.
  • 4. Appears in technical and administrative contexts (geography, law, ecology) as a neutral label for islands regardless of size or habitation.

How to use it

Used across casual and formal registers: everyday speech for saying someone is going to or lives on an island, geographic descriptions in media and education, legal or administrative texts when listing islands, and as a productive element in compounds and place names; reading and pronunciation may change in compounds (for example 離島(ritō) in technical contexts or island names switching to -jima in proper nouns).

Variants and close terms

  • 本土(hondo) — mainland (antonym)
  • 列島(retto) — archipelago (related, larger-scale term)
  • 島々(shimajima) — plural/collective form meaning multiple islands
  • 半島(hantō) — peninsula (contrastive geographic term)

Composition

  • The character combines the left-side mountain radical 山(yama), suggesting land or elevation, with the right-side element 鳥(tori), meaning bird; visually and conceptually it evokes a landform (mountain) with birds—a pictorial way to represent an island.

Origin

The concept of 島 (shima) has been central to Japanese life since prehistoric times because the Japanese archipelago shaped settlement, travel, fishing economies and religious practice; the idea and term for island appear early in classical texts and place-naming traditions as communities formed around coastal and insular living.

Word class

noun (名詞)

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